Mes: junio 2016

  • 2009 Pastors’ Conference | Priority of Prayer

    [two_third last=»yes» spacing=»yes» center_content=»no» hide_on_mobile=»no» background_color=»» background_image=»» background_repeat=»no-repeat» background_position=»left top» hover_type=»none» link=»» border_position=»all» border_size=»0px» border_color=»» border_style=»» padding=»» margin_top=»» margin_bottom=»» animation_type=»» animation_direction=»» animation_speed=»0.1″ animation_offset=»» class=»» id=»»][fusion_text]La prioridad de la oración[/fusion_text][separator style_type=»none» top_margin=»» bottom_margin=»» sep_color=»» border_size=»» icon=»» icon_circle=»» icon_circle_color=»» width=»» alignment=»» class=»» id=»»][accordian divider_line=»» class=»» id=»»][toggle title=»Video» open=»no»][/toggle][toggle title=»Audio» open=»no»]

    [dlaudio link=»https://www.conferenciapastoral.org/wp-content/uploads/Sermones/2009-05-05-1030-Priority-of-Prayer-Acts1-14-alan-dunn.mp3″]Download Audio[/dlaudio][/toggle][toggle title=»Texto en español» open=»no»]La prioridad de la oración

    El puritano Samuel Chadwick dice que Satanás solo le tiene pavor a la oración. Las actividades se pueden multiplicar hasta el punto en que la oración no tenga lugar, y las organizaciones crecen hasta no dejar sitio para ella. La única preocupación del diablo es impedir que los santos oren. Él no le teme a los estudios bíblicos en los que no se ora, ni a las obras en las que no cabe la oración, ni a la religión sin ruego. Él se ríe de nuestros esfuerzos y se burla de nuestra sabiduría, pero tiembla cuando oramos.

    A la Iglesia se le ha dado la misión de la oración corporativa y el pastor, como aquel que pastorea a un rebaño, debe guiar al pueblo de Dios en la responsabilidad que le ha sido encomendada. Debemos convertir la oración corporativa en la prioridad de la Iglesia, de forma que esta cumpla con sus deberes en relación con su Maestro y Señor Jesucristo.

    Consideremos algunas de las razones por las que la Iglesia se reunía para orar en el libro de los Hechos de los Apóstoles.

    Recepción del don del apostolado:

    En el capítulo uno vemos que la primera razón era para reconocer y recibir los dones del liderazgo que les llegaba de manos del Cristo exaltado. Vemos la recepción del don del apostolado en Hechos capítulo uno versículo catorce.

    Todos éstos estaban unánimes, entregados de continuo a la oración junto con las mujeres, y con María la madre de Jesús, y con los hermanos de Él.

    Durante diez días, la Iglesia perseveró en la oración, esperando que el Espíritu les ministrara, y fue después de este tiempo extenso de oración que se llenó el puesto de apóstol [dejado por Judas]. En el versículo veinticuatro leemos lo que oraron y dijeron,
    Tú, Señor, que conoces el corazón de todos, muéstranos a cuál de estos dos has escogido para ocupar este ministerio y apostolado, del cual Judas se desvió para irse al lugar que le correspondía.

    Fueron dirigidos a obedecer la Palabra de Dios a la hora de sustituir a Judas en el apostolado. Oraron. Recibieron dirección y eligieron a Matías según la provisión de Dios.

    Institución del ministerio del diaconato:

    En Hechos capítulo seis vemos la institución del ministerio del diaconato y el de un líder: el liderazgo que nace en el contexto de la oración. Y en Hechos seis, versículo seis, después de elegir a esos hombres, una vez más cualificados según las Escrituras, capacitados por el Espíritu para tener las cualidades especificadas en la Biblia y reconocidas por el pueblo [de Dios], versículo 6,

    …los… presentaron ante los apóstoles, y después de orar, pusieron sus manos sobre ellos.

    Como en Hechos capítulo uno, los apóstoles establecieron las cualificaciones necesarias que vemos en el versículo tres de dicho capítulo. La congregación estaba implicada en la responsabilidad de reconocer y escoger a los hombres cualificados según el versículo cinco. Luego, la congregación junto con los líderes oraron unánimes y recibieron los dones de los diáconos.

    La función de anciano:

    En Hechos capítulo catorce, tenemos lo mismo con respecto a la función de anciano. En Hechos catorce, versículo veintitrés Pablo ha vuelto a Listria, Listra, Iconio y Antioquía. Ha animado a los discípulos y en conjunto con este ministerio, versículo veintitrés,

    Después que les designaron ancianos en cada iglesia, habiendo orado con ayunos, los encomendaron al Señor en quien habían creído.

    ¿Cuál era el contenido de su oración? No se nos dice. Se nos dice simplemente que los encomendaron al Señor.

    Ahora bien; en el versículo diecinueve vemos que esa iglesia se veía inmersa en una situación de oposición y persecución. Pablo había sido apedreado. Se veían inmersos en la tribulación. Es lo que Pablo les había predicado en el versículo veintidós: entraremos en el reino por medio de la tribulación. Así pues, en esta ocasión, encomendar estos hombres al Dios en el que creían implicaba confiarlos a la protección del Señor, pidiendo a Dios que los cuidara y los usara.

    En Hechos capítulo veinte se da la ocasión en la que el Apóstol habla a los ancianos de Éfeso que vienen a Mileto para encontrarse con él y vemos el mandamiento que les da en el versículo veintiocho. El les dice,

    Tened cuidado de vosotros y de toda la grey, en medio de la cual el Espíritu Santo os ha hecho obispos para pastorear la iglesia de Dios, la cual El compró con su propia sangre. Sé que después de mi partida, vendrán lobos feroces entre vosotros que no perdonarán el rebaño, y que de entre vosotros mismos se levantarán algunos hablando cosas perversas para arrastrar a los discípulos tras ellos. Por tanto, estad alerta, recordando que por tres años, de noche y de día, no cesé de amonestar a cada uno con lágrimas. Ahora os encomiendo a Dios y a la palabra de su gracia, que es poderosa para edificaros y daros la herencia entre todos los santificados.

    De modo que tenemos la petición del Apóstol. Encomienda a los ancianos al Señor como lo hizo anteriormente en Hechos catorce.

    Observe el versículo treinta y seis:

    Cuando hubo dicho estas cosas, se puso de rodillas, y oró con todos ellos.

    Por ello, no podemos más que asumir que la oración consistía en llevar a cabo lo que había predicado, lo que les había encomendado, pidiendo por su protección; rogando que la gracia les fuese concedida para que pudiesen cuidarse de ellos mismos y velar por el rebaño; que fuesen conscientes de las estratagemas del maligno que pudieran surgir aun de entre ellos mismos; en resumen, encomendarles a la gracia de Dios de modo que pudieran ser edificados. Creo que estas cosas fueron las que Pablo oró con respecto al ministerio de los ancianos.

    La Iglesia no solo oró para que los líderes fuesen reconocidos y recibidos sino que, en segundo lugar, pidió protección contra la oposición.

    Volviendo al libro de los Hechos capítulo doce, leemos desde el versículo uno al cinco.

    Por aquel tiempo el rey Herodes echó mano a algunos que pertenecían a la iglesia para maltratarlos. E hizo matar a espada a Jacobo, el hermano de Juan. Y viendo que esto agradaba a los judíos, hizo arrestar también a Pedro. Esto sucedió durante los días de los panes sin levadura. Y habiéndolo tomado preso, lo puso en la cárcel, entregándolo a cuatro piquetes de soldados para que lo guardaran, con la intención de llevarlo ante el pueblo después de la Pascua.

    Vemos que Pedro fue encarcelado, pero la Iglesia de Dios oraba fervientemente por él. Aquí tenemos, pues, una circunstancia de oposición y persecución; el liderazgo de la Iglesia se ve atacado. Santiago había sido martirizado. Pedro está en prisión y la Iglesia hace una petición, empieza a serigrafiar camisetas con el eslogan de “¡liberad a Pedro!” y emprende una marcha alrededor de la cárcel con pancartas y gritos de protesta. ¡No, no! La Iglesia comienza a orar. La Iglesia se pone a orar y, como resultado, leemos que Pedro fue liberado de la prisión por medio de un ángel.

    Luego, en el versículo doce, dándose cuenta de que había sido liberado, se dirigió a casa de María, la madre de Juan también conocido como Marcos, donde muchos estaban reunidos orando. La Iglesia está reunida para celebrar un culto de oración.

    Ahora bien, ¿por qué oraban? Una vez más, Lucas no nos lo dice específicamente, ¿pero cuál era el motivo de esas oraciones? Sus enemigos les habían atacado. Santiago había sido decapitado. Pedro está en la cárcel. ¿Qué podían estar orando?

    Su Maestro les había dicho:

    Pero yo os digo: Amad a vuestros enemigos, bendecid a los que os maldicen, haced bien a los que os aborrecen, y orad por los que os ultrajan y os persiguen; para que seáis hijos de vuestro Padre que está en los cielos […] (Mt. 5:44-45).

    Lucas no nos lo dice pero creo que tenemos suficientes razones para esperar, y pensar, que estaban orando por sus enemigos y que Dios oyó sus oraciones y liberó a Pedro de la cárcel.

    Esa oración por los enemigos se ve en el primer martirio, el de Esteban, en Hechos capítulo siete y versículo sesenta; mientras le apedreaban hasta la muerte se nos dice que él oraba diciendo:

    Señor, no les tomes en cuenta este pecado.

    Oraron para reconocer y recibir líderes; pidieron protección de sus enemigos y para sus enemigos. En tercer lugar, la Iglesia se reunió para orar por la proclamación del Evangelio. En Hechos capítulo cuatro vemos que el Evangelio se estaba predicando en medio de una intensa oposición y, en medio de esa persecución, la Iglesia creció. La oposición y la persecución se convirtieron en el entorno de la oración corporativa.

    En el capítulo cuatro de Hechos, leemos desde el versículo veintitrés,

    Cuando quedaron en libertad

    Aquí se está refiriendo a Juan y a Pedro con el Sanedrín.

    …fueron a los suyos y les contaron todo lo que los principales sacerdotes y los ancianos les habían dicho.

    Al oír ellos esto, unánimes alzaron la voz a Dios y dijeron: Oh, Señor, tú eres el que HICISTE EL CIELO Y LA TIERRA, EL MAR Y TODO LO QUE EN ELLOS HAY, el que por el Espíritu Santo, por boca de nuestro padre David, tu siervo, dijiste:

    ¿POR QUE SE ENFURECIERON LOS GENTILES,
    Y LOS PUEBLOS TRAMARON COSAS VANAS?

    SE PRESENTARON LOS REYES DE LA TIERRA,
    Y LOS GOBERNANTES SE JUNTARON A UNA
    CONTRA EL SEÑOR Y CONTRA SU CRISTO.

    Porque en verdad, en esta ciudad se unieron tanto Herodes como Poncio Pilato, juntamente con los gentiles y los pueblos de Israel, contra tu santo siervo Jesús, a quien tú ungiste, para hacer cuanto tu mano y tu propósito habían predestinado que sucediera. Y ahora, Señor, considera sus amenazas, y permite que tus siervos hablen tu palabra con toda confianza, mientras extiendes tu mano para que se hagan curaciones, señales y prodigios mediante el nombre de tu santo siervo Jesús.

    Después que oraron, el lugar donde estaban reunidos tembló, y todos fueron llenos del Espíritu Santo y hablaban la palabra de Dios con valor.

    ¿Os acordáis que Juan y Pedro habían sido llevados ante el Sanedrín a causa de la prioridad de predicar? Habían decidido predicar y se les dijo que no lo hicieran; pero ellos siguieron haciéndolo. Después de azotarlos fueron liberados y continuaron predicando, y fueron a la Iglesia y esta siguió y decidió perseverar en la oración.

    En el versículo veinticuatro se dirigen a Dios como Creador suyo, citando las palabras del Salmo 146, versículo seis. Observad, hermanos, cómo este ejemplo de oración nos enseña la forma en la que deberíamos orar. Deberíamos orar nuestra Biblia.

    Deberíamos utilizar nuestra Biblia como contenido y sustancia de nuestra oración. Ellos oraron las palabras del Salmo 146 versículo seis. Luego, desde el versículo veinticinco al veintiocho, oraron las palabras del Salmo 2. Este salmo es una profecía mesiánica que vio su cumplimiento en la crucifixión de Jesucristo.

    Lo que hacen es buscar el lugar puntual de su Biblia en el que se encuentran. Buscan su lugar exacto en la historia de la redención; en su relación con Cristo; en relación con la obra de Dios y su plan de redención. Se sitúan en las Escrituras. Toman las Escrituras y las convierten en el contenido de sus oraciones. Confían en que están orando según la voluntad de Dios porque están orando la Palabra de Dios.

    Oran situando el lugar puntual en el que se encuentran dentro de la Palabra de Dios. No se limitan a venir y derramar sus emociones sin forma, sin estructura y sin dirección de la Palabra de Dios. Oran según su situación en particular, versículos veintinueve y treinta.

    Piden protección y valor para no descuidar la prioridad de la predicación, ese llamamiento que han recibido de Dios como iglesia; y para que sus portavoces, en particular, sean capacitados para hablar la Palabra de Dios. En el versículo treinta y uno eso es precisamente lo que hacen con valentía, coraje y con el poder y la manifestación del espíritu. Se reunieron para orar por la proclamación del Evangelio.

    Hermanos, es necesario que oremos por las grandes preocupaciones del Reino, de manera que tengamos una vida tranquila. ¿Por qué? Para el crecimiento del Evangelio. Esto es bueno y aceptable a los ojos de Dios, nuestro Salvador, quien desea que todos los hombres sean salvos y lleguen al conocimiento de la verdad.

    Tenemos que orar por nuestros líderes civiles para que Dios, en gracia común, los capacite para mantener la paz civil y que nosotros, el pueblo de Dios, podamos vivir tiempos de tranquilidad para concentrarnos en los asuntos del Reino.

    El propósito no es amasar más comodidades terrenales, sino que podamos centrarnos en hacer crecer el Reino y en dar a conocer a todos los hombres las genuinas y sinceras invitaciones que Dios hace, en el Evangelio, para que se arrepientan y vengan al conocimiento de la verdad en Jesucristo. Esto solo lo pueden hacer por medio de la proclamación del Evangelio mientras la Iglesia permanece fiel en sus oraciones, y en la proclamación, para exponer el Evangelio ante los hombres.

    Necesitamos que nuestras reuniones de oración se centren en el Reino. Estos cultos de oración deben ocuparse de las grandes cuestiones del Reino. No podemos consentir que nuestras reuniones de oración se conviertan en un tiempo de autoindulgencia que se centre en nosotros mismos. No pueden ser momentos en los que, como iglesia reunida, se ore por cosas que serían aceptables en el contexto del entorno familiar, o en nuestros devocionales privados.

    No necesitamos movilizar todas las energías del ejército de Dios para orar por la tía Suzi que se ha golpeado el dedo del pie, o quizás por su salvación. Pero… verán ustedes, juntos somos un pueblo comprometido en una guerra spiritual. Debemos tomar todas las armas de la oración y comprometernos en el campo de batalla para el crecimiento del Reino de Dios; para dar prioridad a las grandes cuestiones de la Iglesia y del crecimiento del Evangelio en nuestros días; y para interceder de forma cierta por los temas específicos que afectan a la vida y al ministerio de la iglesia local. Sin embargo, debemos mantener una amplia visión de lo que la oración debería ser cuando el pueblo de Dios esté reunido como una congregación.

    Pablo dice, en el versículo ocho, mientras define sus prioridades —recordemos que, en el capítulo tres y versículo quince, está escribiendo: “para que sepas cómo debe conducirse uno en la casa de Dios”— de modo que, en el versículo ocho del capítulo dos dice:

    “Por consiguiente, quiero que en todo lugar los hombres oren levantando manos santas, sin ira ni discusiones”.

    Ahora bien; algunos de nosotros aplican este versículo de forma práctica en nuestros cultos de oración, de forma que solo a los hombres se les da la responsabilidad de dirigir a la iglesia en oración. Ciertamente todos deben estar comprometidos en la oración; ¡sin embargo, en este texto el deber de orar recae específicamente sobre los hombres!

    De muchas maneras, en lo que a las Escrituras se refiere, la oración es un compromiso masculino. Pablo, o más bien Pedro, se dirige a nosotros como maridos, en 1 Pedro 3:7, y nos dice de vivir con nuestras esposas de forma sabia y con gracia, advirtiéndonos que, de no hacerlo, ¿qué ocurrirá? Nuestras oraciones se verán estorbadas.

    ¿Has experimentado esto alguna vez? ¿Has tenido alguna vez una discusión con tu esposa? —¿eres lo suficientemente sincero para reconocer que tienes discusiones con tu esposa?—; quiero decir que algunas personas contestan de forma negativa diciendo: yo no discuto nunca con mi mujer… Pues yo sí. Ambos somos pecadores. ¿Has discutido alguna vez con tu esposa? Las cosas no están resueltas. Abre tu biblia por la mañana. Es hora de encontrarse con Dios; comienza a orar y es como si el Señor te tocara en el hombro y te dijera: “¿no tienes una esposa? ¿Qué haces aquí, hablando conmigo, cuando ella está por allí, todavía dolida? ¿No tienes algo que hacer antes? Y entonces te das cuenta de que hay algo que debes hacer, y es ponerte en paz con ella. Necesitas resolver este tema.

    Necesitas vivir sabiamente, en gracia con tu esposa y después volver delante del Señor y sentir que ahora tus oraciones son bien acogidas. Mirad, la oración es algo que se nos asigna a nosotros, como hombres, en la iglesia. La oración no es para los niños. Es para los hombres.

    “Estad alertas, permaneced firmes en la fe, portaos varonilmente, sed fuertes. Todas vuestras cosas sean hechas con amor” 1 Corintios 15, 16, más bien los versículos 13 y 14.

    “Quiero que en todo lugar los hombres oren”. Actuad como hombres. ¿Qué hacéis como hombres? Quiero que seas un hombre de oración. Quiero que seas un hombre de oración. Cuando ores, toma tu posición de liderazgo en la casa: el esposo sobre la esposa; el padre sobre los hijos; el hombre en la comunidad del pueblo de Dios y, como líder, ora por los líderes. Ora por aquellos que tengan responsabilidad en el área civil; por los reyes y por los que estén en una posición de autoridad.

    Hermanos, tenemos que ser conscientes de lo crucial y lo eficaz que es la oración. Pablo nos dice, en Romanos 8:26 al 28 que, aunque no sepamos cómo ni qué orar, el Espíritu Santo intercede por nosotros con gemidos indecibles, que suben hasta el oído de Dios nuestro Padre, y Él comprende aun los quejidos de nuestro corazón. Así como un padre comprende los gemidos y los llantos de un bebé en su cuna.

    Aunque no articule palabras, se sabe cuando el niño llora porque su pañal está mojado, porque tiene sueño e intenta dormirse, o si solo tiene un arranque de llanto porque quiere salir de la cuna. Uno puede decir qué tipo de llanto es el que el bebé está expresando aunque no sepa decir ni una palabra.

    Pues bien, de esa misma manera el Padre reconoce los gemidos de sus hijos. Tenemos que venir con una expectativa expresada, entendiendo confiadamente que nuestras oraciones intercedidas por el Espíritu Santo están en línea con los propósitos de Dios, quien escucha y conoce las respuestas y hace que todas las cosas ayuden para bien.

    Santiago nos señala a Elías, el hombre que estamos estudiando en esta conferencia, y nos recuerda el poder que tenía en la oración. Era eficiente en su ministerio de oración: puso fin a aquel periodo de hambruna y nos recuerda que las oraciones de un hombre justo pueden lograr muchas cosas.

    Recientemente hice un estudio muy interesante, mientras recordaba el martirio de nuestros amigos Arif y Kathy Khan, con ocasión del primer aniversario de su muerte. Dirigí un estudio, en nuestra iglesia, en el que analizamos las oraciones de los santos que se hallaban debajo del altar en el capítulo seis, versículo nueve de Apocalipsis. Vimos cómo aquellos que han partido antes que nosotros están comprometidos en la oración. En su estado incorpóreo están haciendo crecer el Reino por medio de la oración.

    Luego, en un estudio posterior, consideramos cómo las oraciones que proceden del altar juegan un papel en la revelación de los juicios de Dios sobre la tierra. Es muy interesante ver que, junto con el resultado de las trompetas y las copas, Juan nos recuerda una que otra vez las voces que salen del altar y las respuestas que Dios da a los santos que han sido martirizados. El libro de Apocalipsis debe hacernos entender que el trato de Dios con los hombres en la historia es, en mayor medida, una respuesta a las oraciones de los mártires.

    ¡Entendamos lo crucial, lo importante y lo eficaz que es la oración!

    Permitidme alentaros a que dirijáis a vuestra congregación para que tenga momentos de oración corporativa. Haced reuniones que solo sean para la oración, reuniones regulares de oración. Organizad espacios de tiempo dedicados a extensos momentos de oración. Que sean tiempos, en la vida de la congregación, donde haya una preocupación: ¡vamos a tener un día de ayuno y oración! ¡Tengamos un tiempo durante el cual busquemos el rostro de Dios! ¡Saturad las reuniones corporativas con la oración!

    Haced que los visitantes que vengan a vuestra iglesia —y que puedan estar acostumbrados a ver todo tipo de cosas: que todo se mueve, que todo relampaguea, que hay colores, humos y todas esas cosas— vengan a vuestra iglesia y queden impresionados con palabras; esas palabras que Dios habla a los hombres y aquellas que estos eleven hacia Él. Que sean palabras; personas saturadas de palabras que escuchan la Palabra de Dios y que dirigen palabras a Dios.

    Orad por vuestros gobernantes pidiendo a Dios que conceda la paz social para que el Evangelio pueda prosperar en medio de vosotros. Orad por vuestras iglesias hermanas en las que se proclama la Palabra de Dios.

    Orad los unos por los otros, como creyentes, pero sobre todo por el crecimiento del Reino en la vida de cada uno. Orad por un crecimiento en santidad; por un mayor entendimiento de la Palabra de Dios; por vuestros esfuerzos a la hora de evangelizar, llevando las cargas los uno de los otros y cumpliendo así la ley de Cristo.

    Yo creo que es sabio asignar a los hombres la responsabilidad de orar; entrenarlos para que se levanten, hablen y hagan oír su voz y que todos puedan decir “amen” una vez oído y entendido lo que se ha orado. Recordemos el principio regulador de Pablo en 1 Corintios 14:40: “Que todo se haga decentemente y con orden”.

    © Copyright | Derechos Reservados[/toggle][toggle title=»Text in English» open=»no»]Brethren, let’s begin together with a word of prayer.

    Our glorious and loving Father, You have welcomed us into Your presence in union with Jesus Christ, and for the sake of our Saviour You have determined to do us good. We come today as Your sons and ask that You would give us Your spirit, this spirit of supplication and of prayer. That we would be among those who call upon the name of the Lord. That we would be among those who are members of Your house, that house which is to be a house of prayer for the nations. That we would gladly take our place today as a royal priesthood who come into Your presence offering spiritual sacrifice of praise and thanksgiving. That we would come and lay our petitions before You, casting our cares upon You, knowing that You care for us. That we would come confessing our sin, our constant need of that mercy that You give to us in full supply, through Christ Jesus. That we would come and petition, our Father, for the glory of Your name, in the midst of Your people, for the power of Your Word to go forth victoriously, to conquer, and to build, establish, and bring praise to Christ.

    Our God, we pray today that in this hour we would be challenged to be men who are men of prayer, that we would labor to see Your Church be a house of prayer, and that in our ministries, as pastors to Your people, that we would know what it is to stand in the gap and to intercede and to plead for the glory of Your name to be manifest in the transformed lives of Your people. So, our God, we thank you and ask for Your Spirit in this hour, that we might be challenged and encouraged and emboldened to be more faithful and constant in the glorious privilege that You’ve given to us, as sons, to come before You in prayer. We ask these mercies in Christ’s name. Amen.

    The Puritan Samuel Chadwick says Satan dreads nothing but prayer. Activities are multiplied that prayer may be ousted, and organizations are increased that prayer may have no chance. The one concern of the devil is to keep the saints from praying. He fears nothing from prayerless studies, prayerless work, prayerless religion. He laughs at our toil, mocks at our wisdom, but trembles when we pray.

    We’ve looked in our last hour at our priority of preaching. In this hour I want to survey the priority of prayer, considering both congregational prayer, as well as pastoral intercessory prayer.

    1) The priority of congregational prayer.

    Now, it traditionally has been the practice of evangelical churches in the United States to meet on Wednesday nights for prayer. That’s our practice in our church in Flemington. But sadly we are seeing a day when many American churches are discontinuing this practice, and no longer having a midweek meeting that is devoted solely to prayer. Now, I’m not saying that a church has to meet on a Wednesday night. I’m even willing to say that a church does not have to have a meeting specifically for prayer, although there is biblical precedent for that, and good reason for that, and biblical reason for that. But I am saying that the Church is given the assignment of corporate prayer, and the Pastor, as shepherd of the flock, must guide the people of God into this assigned responsibility. We must make corporate prayer a priority of the church so that the Church accomplishes her duties in relation to her Master and Lord Jesus Christ.

    Let’s consider some reasons why the Church met for prayer in the book of Acts.

    1- The Church prayed to recognize and receive the gifts of leadership from Christ.

    As we turn to Acts chapter 1, we see that the first reason was so that the Church would recognize and receive the gifts of leadership from Christ. The Church met to pray to recognize and receive the gifts of leadership given to them by the exalted Christ. We see the reception of the gift of apostle in Acts chapter 1, verse 14.

    “These all with one mind were continually devoting themselves to prayer, along with the women, and Mary the mother of Jesus, and with His brothers.”

    For ten days the Church labored in prayer, waiting for the ministry of the Spirit, and in conjunction with that extended prayer time the office of apostle was filled out. We read in verse 24,

    “And they prayed and said, ‘Lord, You know the hearts of all men, show which one of these two You have chosen to occupy this ministry and apostleship from which Judas turned aside to go to his own place.’”

    They were directed to be obedient in the Word of God in the replacement of Judas to the apostleship. They prayed, they were directed, and it was Matthias that was chosen in accordance with God’s provision.

    In Acts chapter 6 we see the institution of the ministry of the deacon, and again, it is leadership that is borne in the context of prayer. In Acts 6:6, after having selected these men, qualified, again, by the Scriptures, enabled of the Spirit to meet biblical qualifications recognized by the people.

    Verse 6, “And these they brought before the apostles; and after praying, they laid their hands on them.”

    As in Acts chapter 1, the apostles laid out the necessary qualifications that we see there in verse 3. The congregation was involved in the responsibility of recognizing and then selecting the men that were qualified, in verse 5. The congregation then, in union with the leaders, praying together, recognizing and receiving the gifts of deacons.

    In Acts chapter 14, the same thing relevant to the office of elder. Acts 14:23. Paul now has returned to Lystra and Iconium and Antioch. He’s encouraged the disciples, and in conjunction with that ministry, verse 23,

    “When they had appointed elders for them in every church, having prayed with fasting, they commended them to the Lord in whom they had believed.”

    Now, what would they have been praying? We’re not told. We’re simply told that “they commended them to the Lord.”

    Now, we know, in verse 19, that this church was in a context of opposition and persecution. Paul had been stoned. They were in the midst of tribulation. That’s what Paul had preached to them in verse 22: “Through tribulation we must enter the kingdom of God.” So, certainly to commend these men to the Lord in whom they had believed, on this occasion would involve entrusting them to the Lord’s protection, asking God to keep them and preserved them and use them.

    In Acts chapter 20 we have an occasion of the Apostle speaking to the elders of Ephesus who come to Miletus to meet with the Apostle, and we read of his commending them here in verse 28. He tells them,

    “Be on guard for yourselves and for all the flock, among which the Holy Spirit has made you overseers, to shepherd the church of God which He purchased with His own blood. I know that after my departure savage wolves will come in among you, not sparing the flock; and from among your own selves men will arise, speaking perverse things, to draw away the disciples after them. Therefore be on the alert, remembering that night and day for a period of three years I did not cease to admonish each one with tears. And now I commend you to God and to the word of His grace, which is able to build you up and to give you the inheritance among all those who are sanctified.”

    So here is a commending of the Apostle. He commends the elders to the Lord, as he did there earlier in Acts 14.

    Notice in verse 36,

    “When he had said these things, he knelt down and prayed with them all.”

    So we can but assume that what he prayed was a further driving home the things that he had preached, the things that he has commended to them, asking for their protection; asking for the grace to be granted them that they might guard themselves and watch the flock and be aware of the devices of the Evil One rising even from among them; that there would be a commending to the grace of God that is able to build them up. These things, I believe, were things that Paul prayed in conjunction with the ministry of the elders.

    2- The Church prayed for protection from opposition.

    Not only did the Church pray for the recognition and reception of leaders, but secondly the Church prayed for protection from opposition.

    Let me turn back to chapter 12 in the book of Acts, we read from verse 1 to verse 5.

    “Now about that time Herod the king laid hands on some who belonged to the church in order to mistreat them. And he had James the brother of John put to death with a sword. When he saw that it pleased the Jews, he proceeded to arrest Peter also. Now it was during the days of Unleavened Bread. When he had seized him, he put him in prison, delivering him to four squads of soldiers to guard him, intending after the Passover to bring him out before the people. So Peter was kept in the prison, but prayer for him was being made fervently by the church to God.”

    Peter was kept in prison, but prayer for him was being fervently made by the Church to God. Here as an occasion of opposition, persecution; the leadership of the Church is being attacked. James has been martyred, Peter is in prison, and the Church takes a petition, starts printing up t-shirts “free Peter!” and began to march around the prison, with signs, shouting in protests. No, no! The Church went to prayer. The Church went to prayer, and as a result of that we read that Peter, by the hand of an angel, was delivered from the prison.

    Then in verse 12, realizing that he has been delivered he went to the house of Mary, the mother of John who was also called Mark, where many were gathered together and were praying. The Church is assembled for a prayer meeting!

    Now, what were they praying? Again, Luke doesn’t tell us specifically, but what is the occasion? Their enemies have attacked them! James has been beheaded! Peter is in prison! What would they pray?

    Their Master told them,

    “I say unto you, love your enemies, and pray for those who persecute you in order that you may be sons of your Father who is in Heaven.” (Matthew 5:44-45).

    Luke doesn’t tell us, but I believe we have every reason to hope and think that they were praying for their enemies, and God heard their prayers and delivered Peter from prison.

    This prayer for enemies is seen in the first martyr of Stephen in Acts chapter 7, verse 60; while being stoned to death we’re told he prayed and said:

    “Lord, do not hold this sin against them.”

    They prayed to recognize and receive leaders; they prayed for protection from their enemies and for their enemies; thirdly, the Church met to pray for the proclamation of the gospel.

    3- The Church prayed for the proclamation of the gospel.

    In Acts chapter 4 the gospel was being preaching in the midst of intense opposition, and it is in this persecution that the Church grew. Opposition and persecution became the setting of corporate prayer.

    In chapter 4 of Acts, reading from verse 23,

    When they had been released…

    That is, John and Peter from the Sanhedrin.

    …they went to their own companions and reported all that the chief priests and the elders had said to them. And when they heard this, they lifted their voices to God with one accord and said, “O Lord, it is You who made the heaven and the earth and the sea, and all that is in them, who by the Holy Spirit, through the mouth of our father David Your servant, said,

    ‘Why did the Gentiles rage,
    And the peoples devise futile things?
    ‘The kings of the earth took their stand,
    And the rulers were gathered together
    Against the Lord and against His Christ.’

    For truly in this city there were gathered together against Your holy servant Jesus, whom You anointed, both Herod and Pontius Pilate, along with the Gentiles and the peoples of Israel, to do whatever Your hand and Your purpose predestined to occur. And now, Lord, take note of their threats, and grant that Your bond-servants may speak Your word with all confidence, while You extend Your hand to heal, and signs and wonders take place through the name of Your holy servant Jesus.” And when they had prayed, the place where they had gathered together was shaken, and they were all filled with the Holy Spirit and began to speak the word of God with boldness.

    You remember that John and Peter had been brought before the Sanhedrin because of the priority of preaching? They resolved to preach, and they were told not to preach, and they resolved to continue to preach. Having been beaten they were released and they continued to preach, and they went to the Church and the Church was continued and resolved to pray.

    In verse 24 they address God as their Creator, quoting the words of Psalm 146, and verse 6. Notice, brethren, the example of the prayer. It gives to us instruction as to what we should pray. We should pray our Bibles. We should use our Bible as the content and substance of our prayer. They prayed from Psalm 146, verse 6. Then in verse 25 through 28 they prayed from Psalm 2. This Psalm is a Messianic prophecy that came to fulfillment in the crucifixion of Jesus Christ.

    What they do is they locate where they are in their Bibles. They find where they are in redemptive history in relation to Christ: in relation to the work of God and His plan of redemption. They situate themselves in Scripture. They take the Scripture and make that the content of their prayers. They’re confident that they’re praying according to the will of God, because they’re praying the Word of God.

    They’re praying where they are in the Word of God. They’re not simply coming and pouring out emotions without any form or structure or direction from the Word of God. They do pray concerning their particular situation.

    (Verse 29 and 30.) A petition for protection and a request for boldness, that they not slack back from their priority of preaching, from that calling that God has given to them as a Church, and to their spokesman in particular, that they would be enabled to speak the Word of God. In verse 31, that’s precisely what they did, and they did so with courage and with boldness and with the power and demonstration of the Spirit. They met to pray for the advancement of the Kingdom through the proclamation of the gospel.

    4- The Church prayed for their civil leaders.

    Fourthly, Paul tells us in 1 Timothy chapter 2 further instruction as to what we ought to pray.

    We are to pray for our civil leaders. Again, so that the Church might live in peace and be enabled to advance the Kingdom of God. Our concerns are for the Kingdom of God. 1 Timothy 2:1-2,

    “First of all, then, I urge that entreaties and prayers, petitions and thanksgivings, be made on behalf of all men, for kings and all who are in authority, so that we may lead a tranquil and quiet life in all godliness and dignity.”

    We need to pray, brethren, for large Kingdom concerns so that we would have undisturbed lives. Why? For the advancement of the gospel. This is good and acceptable in the sight of God our Savior who desires all men to be saved and come to a knowledge of the truth.

    We need to pray for our civil leaders so that God in common grace would enable them to maintain civil peace so that we the people of God can live in times of tranquility to be about the business of the Kingdom. Not for the amassing of more earthly comforts, but so that we might be about the business of advancing the Kingdom and making it known to all men of God’s genuine, sincere summons in the gospel: that men would repent, that men would come to a knowledge of the truth in Jesus Christ. They can only do that through the proclamation of the gospel as the church is faithful in her praying and proclaiming to get the gospel before men.

    We need to make our prayer meetings Kingdom-focused. We need to make our prayer meetings concerned with the large issues of the Kingdom. We cannot allow our prayer meetings to become times of self indulgence and self focus where we’re praying as a gathered church for things that would be satisfactory to pray in the context of a family setting or one’s own private devotions.

    We all don’t need to marshal the energies of the army of God in prayer to pray for Aunt Susie’s stubbed toe, or Aunt Susie’s salvation, maybe. But you see, we’re together as a people engaged in spiritual warfare. We’re to take the weapons of all-prayer and engage in the battlefield for the advancement of the kingdom of God and to give priority to the large issues of the church and of the advancement of the gospel in our day and to intercede certainly for crucial issues of personal concern, certainly for specific issues that affect the life and ministry of the local church, but to maintain a large vision of what the prayer ought to be by the assembled gathered people of God.

    Paul says in verse 8 as he maps out his priorities—remember he’s writing here, chapter 3, and verse 15, so that you will know how to conduct yourself in the household of God.

    So he says in verse 8 of chapter 2, “I desire therefore that the men pray in every place, lifting up holy hands, without wrath and disputing.”

    Now some of us apply this verse in practical ways at our church prayer meetings so that only the men are given the responsibility of leading the church in prayer. Certainly all are to be engaged in prayer, but the duty of prayer in this text falls specifically upon the shoulders of the men! That prayer in many ways biblically is a masculine engagement. Peter tells us as husbands to live with our wives with wisdom and with grace in 1 Peter 3:7, warning that if we don’t, what will happen? Our prayers will be hindered.

    Have you ever experienced that? Had an argument with your wife—are you honest enough to say you have arguments with your wife? I mean, I some people say they don’t–I never argue with my wife. …I do. We’re both sinners. Ever have an argument with your wife? Things are not resolved. Come in the morning, open your Bible. It’s time to meet with God, begin to pray and it’s though the Lord taps you on the shoulder and says, “Don’t you have a wife? What’re you doing here talking to Me when she’s over there still hurting? Don’t you have some business to do first?” You realize, “Yes, I need to make peace. I need to resolve. I need to live with my wife with wisdom and with grace and then come back before the Lord and have a sense of my prayers now being welcomed.” You see prayer is something that is assigned to us as men in the church. Prayer is not for boys. It’s for men.

    “Be on the alert. Stand firm in the faith. Act like men and let, and be strong and let all you do be done in love.” (1 Corinthians 16:13-14.)

    “I would that the men in every place pray.” (1 Timothy 2:8.)

    Act like men. What do you do to act like men? I want you to be a man of prayer. I want you to be a man of prayer. When you pray take your position of leadership in the home, husband to wife, father to children, a man in the community of God’s people and as a leader pray for the leaders. Pray for those who have responsibility in the civil arena for kings and for those who are in authority.

    Brethren, we need to realize how crucial and effective prayer is. Paul tells us in Romans 8:26-28 that although we do not know how or what to pray the Holy Spirit yet intercedes for us and brings genuine heart yearnings into the ear of God our Father, and He understands even the groanings of our hearts.

    In the same way that a parent understands the groanings and cries of an infant in its crib. They’re not articulating words, but you can tell when a child is crying whether it’s diaper is wet, whether it’s just sleepy and he’s crying himself to sleep, or whether he’s in there having an, a temper fit because he wants to get out of the crib and you can tell what kind of cry is being expressed by the child who doesn’t even speak words.

    Well so, too, the Father recognizes the groans of His children. We need to come with an expressed anticipation, with a confident understanding that our prayers interceded by the Holy Spirit are being with aligned with the purposes of God who hears and knows and answers and causes all things to work together for good.

    James points us to Elijah, the man we’re studying in this very conference, and reminds us of how powerful he was in prayer. He was effective in his prayer ministry, bringing an end to that period of famine and reminds us that the prayers of a righteous man accomplish much.

    It’s a very interesting study I recently did in conjunction with remembering the martyrdom of our friends Arif and Kathy Khan. In the occasion of the first anniversary of their death I conducted a study in our church where we analyzed the prayers of the saints beneath the altar in Revelation chapter 6, verse 9 through 11 and we saw how those who’ve gone before us are engaged in praying. They are advancing the kingdom in their disembodied state by prayer.

    And then, in a subsequent study we looked at how the prayers that come from the altar play a role in the unfolding of God’s judgments upon the earth. Very interesting that in conjunction with the sequel of trumpets and bowls John will occasionally remind us of the voices coming from the altar and the answers of prayer that God gives to the saints who’ve been martyred. We’re to understand from the book of the Revelation that God’s dealings with men in history is in large measure an answer to the prayers of the martyrs.

    Understand how crucial, important and effective prayer is!

    Let me encourage you to lead your congregation into times of corporate prayer. Have meetings that are just for prayer, regular prayer meetings. Have times that are devoted to extended times of prayer. Times in the congregation life where there’s a concern: we’re going to have a day of fasting and prayer; we’re going to have a time where we’re going to seek the face of God. Make your corporate meetings saturated with prayer.

    Let the visitors who come to your church who may be used to seeing all kinds of things and everything moving and everything flashing and colors and smoke and all of the — let them come to your church and be impressed with words—words: the words that are spoken from God to men and the words that are spoken from man to God—words, word-saturated people, hearing the Word from God and speaking words to God.

    Pray for your civil leaders asking God for social peace that the gospel may prosper among you. Pray for your sister churches and for ministries that you know where the Word of God is being proclaimed.

    Pray for one another as believers, but particularly for the advancement of the kingdom in each other’s life. Pray for growth in holiness; for greater understanding of the Word of God; for your efforts to evangelize; carrying one another’s burdens and thus fulfill the law of Christ.

    It’s wise, I believe to assign men the responsibility of praying and to train them to stand and speak and make their voice heard so that everyone can say the ‘Amen’ having heard and understood what is being prayed. Remember Paul’s regulating principal in 1 Corinthians 14:40, “Let all things be done properly and in an orderly manner.”

    2) The priority of pastoral intercessory prayer.

    Not only is the pastor to make priority of prayer for the congregation, but he must make prayer a priority in his own pastoral ministry.

    To the degree that the pastor realizes his dependence upon God, to that degree he will value intercessory prayer.

    1- The intercessor pleads on behalf of the people.
    He will pray for his people because he knows that only Christ can change them. He’ll pray for his people because he knows that only the Holy Spirit can sanctify them; only the Holy Spirit can cause them to grow; only the Holy Spirit can enable them to use their gifts so as to advance the Kingdom.

    To the degree that he understands his utter dependence upon God, to that degree he’ll pray for his people, instead of complaining about them to his wife or to his fellow elders. He’ll pray for them, because he understands that his wife and elders can’t change them, but God can. They’re God’s people. They bear God’s name. Christ has died for them. Christ has given them His Spirit. Christ has given them His Word. God has given them a mandate. They’re Christ’s people. Take them to Christ; entrust them to Christ.

    In Acts chapter 6, reading verse 2:

    So the twelve summoned the congregation of the disciples and said, “It is not desirable for us to neglect the word of God in order to serve tables. Therefore, brethren, select from among you seven men of good reputation, full of the Spirit and of wisdom, whom we may put in charge of this task. But we will devote ourselves to prayer and to the ministry of the word.”

    Now the demand that the widows were making upon the church was a legitimate demand. It was a need that had to be met. The injustice, the inequity of the distribution of the food was something of a gospel concern. It had to be addressed, and the apostles addressed how that need is going to be fulfilled, and servants are recognized and take their place in the ministry of the Church.

    But they also recognized that this legitimate need posed a threat that would distract them from their primary responsibility of the ministry of the Word. So they resolve to devote themselves, that is to give constant attention and persevere in focused endeavor, to prayer and the ministry of the Word.

    Now, notice that the overall concern is the Word. Verse 2, “It is not desirable for us to neglect the Word.” So in order to maintain that priority of the Word, they devote themselves to prayer and to the ministry of the Word. The both of those are together. To be devoted to the Word requires devotion to prayer and study and ministry of the Word of God. Devotion to the Word of God is devotion to prayer which is devotion to the Word of God—the both are found together, not separately. The both are found together.

    You see, before the pastor stands before his people to speak to men on behalf of God, he must have first stood before God and spoke to God on behalf of men. Before he preaches to men he must first have prayed for them, and while he’s preaching to them he needs to be praying for them. Do you do that?

    There are occasions when I know in my notes that where I am in my passage that I am going to say something now that I’ve had in my heart and I’ve prayed before the Lord in my study, that this particular individual would hear what I’m going to say now, because this piece of food that’s coming from the pulpit is to be put right on that person’s plate. Nobody else knows it and that individual might not know it, but I know it because I’m feeding them!

    I know that when I am in the Word and I am preparing a message and I come to a point and I am impressed, “Lord, this is something that needs to speak to brother so-and-so. He needs to hear this.” So as I say, “Brethren, take your Bibles and turn to such-and-such a passage,” and while the Bibles are turning, I’m saying, “Lord, open brother so-and-so’s ears. I’m about to be Your mouthpiece to this man’s conscience. Open his ears.” You intercede while you’re preaching. While you’re preaching you’re praying for them!

    When the ministry is done and you’re in the back room and you see them talking and everyone is moving about, you say, “Lord, give me an opportunity. When this man comes by and I shake his hand, let me get his eye, let me say something that is going to confirm the Word. Let me get some sense that something has happened, that You’ve done something, because I’ve prayed for them. I’ve prayed for them.”

    Spiritual leadership involves this ministry of intercessory prayer, of standing in the gap. In Genesis chapter 18, Abraham prays for Lot. Yes, he was interceding for the entire city of Sodom, “If there’s fifty righteous, forty, thirty…” he comes down to ten. And when you study the story you realize that Lot and his wife and his children..there could’ve been ten righteous in Lot’s household, and Abraham is hoping that Lot has been righteous, has kept the faith. He’s interceding for him. In Genesis 19:29, when Lot was delivered from Sodom, Moses tells us the reason: God remembered Abraham, and sent Lot out of the midst of the overthrow. Lot was rescued because Abraham interceded for him!

    When Israel sinned with the worship of the golden calf in Exodus 32, Moses interceded for them.

    When God judged the people in Numbers 11 and Numbers 21 for the sin of murmuring Moses interceded for the people.

    After Israel was defeated at the battle of Ai in Joshua 7, Joshua intercedes for the people and is told to search through the camp and God will direct them to the traitor, and Achan surfaces.

    In 1 Samuel 12, a passage I’m sure that you’re familiar with, 1 Samuel 12, it’s a text that we would do well to take to heart, verse 23. 1 Samuel 12, verse 23,

    “Moreover as for me, far be it from me that I should sin against Jehovah by ceasing to pray for you: but I will instruct you in the good and the right way. “

    It’s what the apostles did. It’s what we are to do: devote ourselves to prayer and the ministry of the Word. “I’ll never stop praying for you while I endeavor to instruct you in the way of God.”

    In Daniel chapter 9, Daniel realizing that the seventy years of exile prophesied by Jeremiah has now come to pass, that time has now been completed, what does Daniel do? He gives himself to a ministry of intercessory prayer. In Daniel chapter 9, verse 3,

    So I gave my attention to the Lord God to seek Him by prayer and supplications, with fasting, sackcloth and ashes. I prayed to the Lord my God and confessed and said, “Alas, O Lord, the great and awesome God, who keeps His covenant and lovingkindness for those who love Him and keep His commandments, we have sinned, committed iniquity, acted wickedly and rebelled, even turning aside from Your commandments and ordinances. Moreover, we have not listened to Your servants the prophets, who spoke in Your name to our kings, our princes, our fathers and all the people of the land. Righteousness belongs to You, O Lord, but to us open shame, as it is this day.”

    And Daniel goes on and he prays confessing sin, acknowledging that they rightly deserve God’s discipline that has come upon them in the exile, but God has promised that He would restore them and the time has come in keeping with God’s own words and timetable. Daniel mounts the promises of God and pleads, “God, vindicate Your Word, not because we’re such a great and deserving people, we’re not, but because You are the God who is true to Yourself and to Your promises, so listen to my prayer.”

    In Ezekiel chapter 22 and verse 23, once again you have an example of intercessory prayer by the prophet of God: Ezekiel,

    “The Word of the Lord came to me.”

    In Ezekiel 22 there’s conspiracy. They’ve devoured the people, the priests have gone and done violence. Verse 27, the princes are like wolves; verse 28, the prophets are speaking lies; the people themselves are committing robbery and doing injustice, and God says in verse 30,

    I searched for a man among them who would build up the wall and stand in the gap before Me for the land, so that I would not destroy it; but I found no one. Thus I have poured out My indignation on them; I have consumed them with the fire of My wrath; their way I have brought upon their heads,” declares the Lord.

    The people of God are in moral confusion. The priests, the princes, the prophets, the leaders are in neglect and failing to lead, and God says, “In the midst of these people who are asking for My wrath, I’m looking for someone to intercede but I find no one so their way will come upon them.”

    Now, that’s instructive to us, because it tells us two things about intercessory prayer, and it’s very interesting. The man who would be an intercessor assumes a very dangerous place.

    When you watch Abraham, in Genesis 18, inching closer and closer to God to make intercession, there’s a sense in which you say, “This man is taking great risk,” getting closer and closer to this God who is standing on the brink of destroying Sodom! He’s on His way to pour fire and brimstone on Sodom, and here is Abraham coming closer and closer to Him and interceding in behalf of a people who deserve wrath and damnation. Abraham is in a very dangerous place. God has come in wrath. God has come to destroy, and Abraham’s standing in the middle of that between a people who deserve that wrath and the God who is righteous and holy in exercising that wrath. That’s the place of the intercessor. The same as this instance here in Ezekiel where God says, “These people deserve My wrath. I’m looking for someone to intercede, someone to stand in the gap between the wrath that rightly should fall on them and the heart of the God who yearns to be gracious.”

    You see, the interceder taps into the heart of God because although justice must be served, wrath must be vented. The heart of God is such that He delights in mercy, and when Abraham came and interceded for a people deserving wrath and plead for God’s patience, plead for God’s mercy, plead for God’s salvation, God liked that. He looked at Abraham and you know what He called him?

    “My friend. This is My friend. This is someone who understands the seriousness of My holiness. He understands the seriousness of sin. He understands the justice and the righteousness of My wrath, but there’s something about My friend, Abraham, that resonates with My own heart, because he puts himself at risk and stands under the shadow of impending wrath in order to plead for the salvation and the deliverance of undeserving sinners. I like that. That is My friend.”

    The interceder takes a very risky place because he stands between those who deserve the wrath of God and the God who is righteous in the exercise of that wrath, and yet He pleads for something that is even more deep and profound in the heart of God and that is His desire to to be gracious, to be merciful, to have His wrath propitiated.

    2- The intercessor pleads on the basis of God’s name.

    The second thing that we learn about this intercessor is that he pleads on the basis of God’s name. He pleads for the sake of God. He doesn’t plead for the sake of the people, he pleads for the sake of God.

    Now, he pleads on behalf of the people, but not on the basis of the people. He pleads on behalf of the people on the basis of the name of God; on the basis of the character of God; on the basis of the covenant promises of God.

    Have your children ever done that with you? Years ago we moved into our house that we’re living in now, and sometime prior to that I had made the stupid mistake of telling my kids that when we got to our new house we’d get a dog. To this day I am living with this animal. Jake the Beast. He is a 120 pound, yellow lab. He’s got epilepsy. He’s really ugly. Why do I have this animal in my house? Because my children, when they were very young, about ten years ago, at the dinner table the subject came up,

    “Dad, when are we getting the dog?”

    “What dog?”

    “Remember the dog that you promised we could get when we came to our house?”

    And you know what? They were right. I had promised them that we would get a dog. So, in order to be true to my promise we got the dog.

    You know, we can come to our Father like that and say to Him, “You’ve promised. You’ve promised. You’ve committed yourself. Your name is at stake. Your reputation is at stake. You’ve promised.”

    And take to God His own words, take to Him His promises, not because we deserve it, not on the basis of what we are or what we deserve. If we pray on that line, we’re in trouble! But because of who God is, because of His character, because of His promises, because He’s committed to us in the person of His Son, because of who Jesus Christ is, because He is our Mediator, because He’s given us His Spirit, because we bear His Name among men.

    “For the sake of Your Name, for the sake of Your Word, for the sake of Christ look upon us in mercy and magnify Your grace. We know we’re sinners. We do not deserve anything but Your discipline, but glorify Your grace because You’ve promised. That is Your intent in having saved us. You’ve saved us for grace. You’ve saved us for the glory of Your Name.”

    Let me recommend that you buy and use in your church the book by Donald Carson entitled A Call to Spiritual Reformation. It’s a study of the prayers of the apostle Paul–very helpful. If you find yourself thinking, “You know, we gather for prayer and we’re all over the map, we’re praying about this, we’re praying about that. We need to learn what to pray about.” Well this book is very helpful because it’s a study of the content of Paul’s prayers teaching us to pray for the things that Paul prayed for.

    For example, in Ephesians chapter 1, looking at verse 15, Paul says there in verse 16 that he does not,

    “Cease to give thanks for you, making mention of you in my prayers.”

    Here’s what he prays,

    “That the God of our Lord Jesus Christ the Father of glory may give to you a spirit of wisdom and of revelation in the knowledge of Him, I pray that the eyes of your heart may be enlightened so that you will know what is the hope of His calling, what are the riches of the glory of His inheritance in the saints and what is the surpassing greatness of His power toward us who believe.”

    Paul says here’s what you should pray for each other. Here’s what I’m praying for you. That God would give you wisdom, that God would instruct your heart that you might know and experience real hope, solid hope.

    Again in chapter 3, verse 14, another record of His prayer.

    For this reason I bow my knees before the Father, from whom every family in heaven and on earth derives its name, that He would grant you, according to the riches of His glory, to be strengthened with power through His Spirit in the inner man, so that Christ may dwell in your hearts through faith; and that you, being rooted and grounded in love, may be able to comprehend with all the saints what is the breadth and length and height and depth, and to know the love of Christ which surpasses knowledge, that you may be filled up to all the fullness of God. Now to Him who is able to do far more abundantly beyond all that we ask or think, according to the power that works within us, to Him be the glory in the church and in Christ Jesus to all generations forever and ever. Amen.

    Paul says, “Here’s what I’m praying for you, here’s what I am interceding for in regard to you the church at Ephesus, that you would be given strength by the Spirit in the inner man; so that you would know the presence of Christ in your assembly; so that you would grow in faith that you would experience being loved by Jesus; that You would be complete; and that You would come with me into this place of praise and end with this doxology, ‘To Him be the glory in the church and in Christ Jesus forever and ever.’”

    In Philippians 1:9-11, the same thing. He prays for increased love. He prays for knowledge. He prays for discernment. He prays that we would be enabled to choose the things that are excellent and to arrive before Christ in judgment having lived holy lives and bearing an abundance of fruit. Here’s what we should pray for! Here’s what we should teach our people to pray for!

    There are other places where Paul tells us what he prays for in the church. Paul’s example challenges the way we often pray. We ask for material things. We ask that our situation would change. Paul would say, “Look, don’t worry about changing your situation, worry about YOU changing. Worry about God changing you, not changing your situation. He wants you to be holy in whatever situation you’re in.”

    Yes, you can pray for your health and your job and your situations—“Casting all our cares upon Him because He cares for you”—but pray these things submitted to the Kingdom priorities: holiness, sanctification, discernment, growth in faith, growth in grace.

    Sometimes we pray for people’s situations to change and we don’t stop to think maybe God doesn’t want their situation to change. Maybe He wants them to change in that situation. He’s brought them into that situation to teach them patience, to teach them faith, to teach them endurance.

    We need to be encouraged by the example of a man like Epaphras in Colossians chapter 4, verse 12 and 13.

    Epaphras who is one of your number a bondslave of Jesus Christ sends you his greetings always laboring earnestly for you in his prayers, that you may stand perfect and fully assured in all the will of God. For I testify for him that he has a deep concern for you and for those who are in Laodicea and Hierapolis.”

    It’s thought that Epaphras planted the church in Colossae, but Paul doesn’t mention his preaching ministry. He mentions his intercessory prayer ministry and he says, it’s very, very arduous, it’s very, very difficult. He’s laboring earnestly. The Greek word is ‘agonizing.’ It’s like a picture of the athlete who is straining to cross the finish line with his jugular veins bulging and his sweat pouring out and his muscles straining. It’s work involved. He’s laboring earnestly. He does this always, constantly, continually, in a disciplined, regular manner. Why? So that you may stand perfect, fully assured in the will of God for your growth in grace.

    Our best example in this ministry, of course, is Christ Jesus Himself in Luke chapter 22 where Jesus there speaks to Peter in verse 31,

    “Simon, Simon, behold, Satan has demanded permission to sift you like wheat; but I have prayed for you, that your faith may not fail; and you, when once you have turned again, strengthen your brothers.”

    While Satan sifts our people we need to intercede for them, praying that their faith will not fail.

    Again in John, chapter 17, Jesus’ high priestly prayer. John 17, verse 9,

    “I ask on their behalf; I do not ask on behalf of the world, but of those whom You have given Me; for they are Yours”

    Jesus prays on behalf of His apostles. They are with Him that night before His crucifixion, then verse 20,

    “I do not ask on behalf of these alone, but for those also who believe in Me through their word.”

    He prays for you. He’s praying for me. He’s praying for us who believe. Paul tells us in Romans 8:34, He is at the right hand of God making intercession for us.

    In Hebrews 7:25, “He always lives making intercession for us.” The work of Christ right now is the work of the intercessor. It’s the work He calls us to, as pastors, to come into the privileged place of intercessory prayer. It’s the thing that Christ Himself is doing! If Christ is doing that, ought not we to be doing that?

    Well, quickly let me summarize this last head of practical counsel for the pastoral prayer ministry. I’ve listed to you several passages and commend them to you, but let me ask and attempt to answer the question, what we should pray for our people?

    In Colossians 4, verse 2-4, I believe that we’re taught that we should pray for the Holy Spirit to be given to our people in the ministry of the Word of God.

    We should pray for our people, secondly, that they might endure temptation even as Christ prayed for Peter being tempted, sifted by Satan. We should pray for each member according to their needs as you know them.

    Paul says in Romans 10:1 that he prays for his kindred, he prays for his family. In Luke 11:13, again praying that Christ by the Spirit would be present in the meetings of the church and in Colossians 1:9-12 that the people’s faith, love and fruitful service to Christ would grow.

    Pray for Kingdom concerns, brethren. Pray for Kingdom concerns.

    How should you pray? You need to schedule time to do this. This should be a part of your disciplined, scheduled labor before Christ. You’ll not pray as an interceder by accident. You’ll do it on purpose. You’ll do it by planning to do it. You do it in a systematic way, perhaps in conjunction with your morning devotions to take two or three of the folk who are on your membership list and pray regularly through the list of members.

    When you gather for your elders meetings, devote a large chart of that time for praying for the particular sheep in your flock and intercede for them.

    Carry your people in your heart when you’re working in the Word of God. You’ve got your people there and there’ll be a realization. This passage will meet this need. “I’ve gotta call this person up and encourage them from this word,” or drop to your knees there on that occasion and pray for them. Pray for them spontaneously. Pray for them in a disciplined way. Study Christ. Learn His heart. He is the intercessor and He will teach us to be interceders. Ask for the Spirit of Christ that you might look upon your people with the compassion of Christ and He cannot look at us, but He doesn’t intercede for us.

    Here are two main priorities for our study this year: the priority of preaching and the priority of prayer–the priority of prayer and the priority of preaching.

    We can’t separate them. You’re not going to be an effectual preacher if you’re not a man of prayer and the more you become a man of prayer the more you become a better preacher. The two of them are devoted together.

    May God make us mighty in the pulpit when we speak to men on behalf of God and may God make us mighty on our knees when we speak to God in behalf of men.

    Let’s pray.

    Our Father, we do ask for Your Spirit. We confess that we do not pray as we ought to pray, we do not pray as constantly and as consistently as we should. We do not pray for the things that we should pray for. How often our prayers are misguided. How often we seek to spend our prayers upon ourselves, seeking to advance our own name and our own agenda. Father, we confess that we are unworthy servants. We ask that You would give us Your Spirit and instruct us in the way of intercessory prayer, that we would be men who are bold in Your presence, courageous to stand between You and the wrath that is rightfully deserving of our people that we know, our God, our people are weak, our people are often disobedient and negligent.

    Lord, we pray for the heart of Jesus Christ, that we might stand between You and them and plead that You would vindicate Your gospel purposes in them, that You would magnify the name of Christ among them, that You would cause Your grace and love to triumph in and through them. Father, we pray that praying for them would make us better preachers to them, that we would carry them in our hearts, and that we would speak to them from hearts of yearning compassionate love that we’ve learned from Christ by praying for them. Lord, we pray that You would teach us how to be a people of prayer, that as churches we would be house of prayer for all the nations, praying for the good of Your people, for the establishment of leaders, for the protection that the people of God need so that the work of the Kingdom would go forth through the proclamation of the gospel.

    Lord, we pray, teach us to pray. Give to us a spirit of prayer and magnify Your grace in us and glorify Your Name through us. These things we petition in Jesus Christ. Amen.

    © Copyright | Derechos Reservados[/toggle][/accordian][/two_third]

  • 2009 Pastors’ Conference | Priority of Preaching

    [two_third last=»yes» spacing=»yes» center_content=»no» hide_on_mobile=»no» background_color=»» background_image=»» background_repeat=»no-repeat» background_position=»left top» hover_type=»none» link=»» border_position=»all» border_size=»0px» border_color=»» border_style=»» padding=»» margin_top=»» margin_bottom=»» animation_type=»» animation_direction=»» animation_speed=»0.1″ animation_offset=»» class=»» id=»»][fusion_text]La prioridad de la predicación[/fusion_text][separator style_type=»none» top_margin=»» bottom_margin=»» sep_color=»» border_size=»» icon=»» icon_circle=»» icon_circle_color=»» width=»» alignment=»» class=»» id=»»][accordian divider_line=»» class=»» id=»»][toggle title=»Video» open=»no»][/toggle][toggle title=»Audio» open=»no»]

    [dlaudio link=»https://www.conferenciapastoral.org/wp-content/uploads/Sermones/2009-05-04-1200-Priority-of-Preaching-Gen5-24-alan-dunn.mp3″]Download Audio[/dlaudio][/toggle][toggle title=»Texto en Español» open=»no»]La prioridad de la predicación

    Charles Spurgeon escribe:

    “Queremos que vuelva a haber muchos hombres como Lutero, Bunyan, Calvino, Whitefield, dispuestos a señalar sus errores y cuyos nombres inspiren terror en los oídos de nuestros enemigos. Necesitamos desesperadamente a hombres así. ¿De dónde vendrán?

    Son dones de Cristo a la iglesia y llegarán a su debido tiempo. Él ya dio, y tiene poder de volver a darnos, una edad dorada de predicadores, un tiempo tan fértil en grandes teólogos y poderosos ministros como fue la época de los puritanos. Era un tiempo en el que la antigua y buena verdad se volvió a predicar por hombres cuyos labios parecían tocados por un carbón encendido tomado del altar. Este será el instrumento en manos del Espíritu para llevar a cabo un gran avivamiento profundo de la religión en el país.

    Yo no busco otros medios para que el hombre se convierta fuera de la simple predicación del Evangelio y la apertura de los oídos de los hombres para que la oigan. En el momento en el que la Iglesia de Dios menosprecie el púlpito, Dios la despreciará a ella. El ministerio de la predicación ha sido siempre la forma en la que al Señor le ha placido reavivar y bendecir a sus iglesias”.

    En primer lugar, pues, consideraremos la prioridad de la predicación en la historia del pueblo de Dios. Escudriñaremos en el pasado antiguo durante un momento con el fin de reconocer que Dios trató siempre con su pueblo por medio de predicadores.

    En Génesis capítulo cinco y versículo veinticuatro leemos acerca de Enoc; se nos dice que anduvo con Dios, y desapareció porque Dios se lo llevó. Fue un hombre misterioso, relevante y Judas nos dice en el capítulo uno y versículo catorce que Enoc era un predicador.

    Según dice Judas en el capítulo uno versículo catorce, Enoc profetizó o predicó en la séptima generación desde Adán y su mensaje era de juicio; anunciaba que Dios vendría a ejecutar juicio sobre todos. Vemos el personaje de Noé, en el Antiguo Testamento, y le recordamos sobre todo por haber construido el arca, pero Pedro nos dice en 2 Pedro 2:5 que fue un predicador de justicia.

    Acerca de Abraham, cuya vida conocemos a través de las páginas del Génesis, leemos en el capítulo dieciocho, versículo diecinueve:

    “Porque yo lo he escogido para que mande a sus hijos y a su casa después de él que guarden el camino del Señor, haciendo justicia y juicio, para que el Señor cumpla en Abraham todo lo que Él ha dicho acerca de él”.

    A Abraham se le confió la palabra de Dios y él mandó a su familia que la cumpliese. Su casa estaba formada por varios cientos de personas. En Génesis catorce se nos dice que movilizó a trescientos dieciocho hombres nacidos en su casa para que lucharan contra los cuatro reyes.

    Él ordenó a sus hijos y a su casa que guardaran el camino del Señor. En Génesis capítulo veinte y versículo 7 se dice que Abraham era un profeta. Abraham fue un predicador de la Palabra de Dios.

    Del mismo modo, Moisés fue un predicador. Recibió palabras de Dios y las proclamó ante los israelitas. Gran parte del pentateuco, los primeros cinco libros de la Biblia, recogen las palabras que Moisés dijo a los hijos de Israel. Predicó al pueblo de Dios congregado.

    Cuando observamos a los profetas del Antiguo Testamento como Isaías, Jeremías, Ezequiel, Jonás, Amós, Hageo, Malaquías, Habacuc… vemos que hay algo común entre ellos. Aunque vivieron en distintas situaciones y ministraron en circunstancias diferentes, todos ellos eran predicadores y proclamaron la Palabra de Dios.

    Ahora quiero que busquemos en nuestras Biblias el primero de varios pasajes que me gustaría ver y leer en las Escrituras acerca del ministerio de Juan el Bautista, en Marcos capítulo uno y versículo cuatro. Marcos uno versículo cuatro. Juan el Bautista apareció en el desierto predicando un bautismo de arrepentimiento para el perdón de los pecados. La ordenanza del bautismo definió el ministerio de Juan. Esa fue la actividad que caracterizó a Juan. Se le llama “el Bautista”, pero su ministerio fue el de un predicador. Él fue alguien que predicó un bautismo de arrepentimiento para perdón de los pecados.

    Cuando contemplamos a nuestro Señor y Salvador Jesucristo sabemos que el propósito supremo para el cual vino fue para expiar nuestros pecados por medio de su muerte en la cruz y de su triunfo sobre la muerte en la resurrección. Su victoria sobre Satanás le convirtió en nuestro libertador, pero la prioridad del ministerio de Jesús fue la predicación.

    En Marcos capítulo uno, versículos catorce y quince, leemos: “Después que Juan había sido encarcelado, Jesús vino a Galilea proclamando el evangelio de Dios, y diciendo: El tiempo se ha cumplido y el reino de Dios se ha acercado; arrepentíos y creed en el evangelio”.

    Jesús vino predicando. De nuevo, en el capítulo uno, versículo 38, del Evangelio de Marcos leemos: “Y Él les dijo: Vamos a otro lugar, a los pueblos vecinos, para que predique también allí, porque para eso he venido. Y fue por toda Galilea, predicando en sus sinagogas y expulsando demonios”.

    Las obras de poder de Jesús eran manifestaciones que validaban la Palabra que Él había proclamado.

    En Lucas capítulo cuatro vemos el mensaje de Cristo a su ciudad natal de Nazaret. En el versículo dieciocho y el diecinueve leemos lo que constituye su mandato mesiánico derivado del profeta Isaías:

    “El Espíritu del Señor está sobre mí, porque me ha ungido para anunciar el evangelio a los pobres. Me ha enviado para proclamar libertad a los cautivos, y la recuperación de la vista a los ciegos; para poner en libertad a los oprimidos; para proclamar el año favorable del Señor”.

    El ministerio de Jesús es de proclamación, de predicación, y los Evangelios recogen para nosotros muchos de sus sermones.

    En Mateo capítulo siete tenemos la conclusión del Sermón del Monte y leemos las palabras finales en el versículo veintiocho y en el veintinueve. “Cuando Jesús terminó estas palabras, las multitudes se admiraban de su enseñanza; porque les enseñaba como uno que tiene autoridad, y no como sus escribas”. La gente estaba perpleja, no solo por lo que Él decía sino por la forma en la que lo hacía: su método de comunicación. Era una manifestación de poder. Era una demostración de autoridad.

    En Juan siete, versículo cuarenta y seis, aquellos que fueron enviados a capturar a Jesús se encontraron con su predicación. Le oyeron predicar y volvieron con las manos vacías diciendo: “Jamás hombre alguno ha hablado como este hombre habla”

    Cuando llevaron a Jesús ante Pilato en Juan dieciocho, en el versículo treinta y siete, se dirige a Pilato diciendo: “[…] Para esto yo he nacido y para esto he venido al mundo, para dar testimonio de la verdad. Todo el que es de la verdad escucha mi voz”.

    Para dar testimonio de la Verdad se necesita una voz. La descripción del ministerio de predicación de Jesús, un ministerio de palabras, es lo que hacía que los hombres fuesen responsables ante Dios de haber oído su testimonio acerca de la Verdad.

    Jesús era un predicador y encargó a sus discípulos que, de igual modo, ellos también lo fueran.

    Otra vez, en el Evangelio de Marcos capítulo tres, versículo catorce y quince vemos: “Y designó a doce, para que estuvieran con Él y para enviarlos a predicar, y para que tuvieran autoridad de expulsar demonios”.

    La predicación del Evangelio es el medio a través del cual se ataca a los poderes de la oscuridad.

    ¿Cuándo ocurre esto? En el libro de los Hechos tenemos el ministerio de estos hombres. Vayamos a Hechos de los Apóstoles capítulo uno desde el versículo ocho y esto es lo que leemos: “Pero recibiréis poder cuando el Espíritu Santo venga sobre vosotros; y me seréis testigos en Jerusalén, en toda Judea y Samaria, y hasta los confines de la tierra”.

    Ser un testigo es responsabilizarse del mensaje, de la Palabra, de predicar este Evangelio y esto, claro está, se convierte en el núcleo del ministerio apostólico.

    En Hechos capítulo dos vemos a Pedro. ¿Qué está haciendo? Está predicando. Observamos en el versículo catorce que, poniéndose en pie “con los once, alzó la voz y les declaró […]”.

    Pedro proclama un mensaje, predica un sermón que se deriva de tres textos del Antiguo Testamento. Su sermón tiene tres puntos principales y la aplicación hace que la conciencia de los hombres les conduzca a la fe en Jesucristo. En el versículo cuarenta leemos: “Y con muchas otras palabras testificaba solemnemente y les exhortaba diciendo: Sed salvos de esta perversa generación”.

    Cuando, al analizar el capítulo dos del libro de los Hechos, lo único que se reconoce es que esa gente habló en lenguas esto implica que no estamos viendo lo que el Espíritu Santo nos ha dado en ese pasaje. Se trata de un sermón que se ha recogido allí. Es el relato de un predicador que abre la Palabra de Dios y predica sobre Joel, sobre los Salmos y que declara a Cristo crucificado, resucitado e insta a los hombres al arrepentimiento y a la fe.

    En Hechos capítulo tres el Señor usa a Pedro para sanar a un cojo y ¿qué es lo que esto provoca? Una oportunidad para predicar el segundo sermón que se recoge en Hechos capítulo tres. En el capítulo cuatro versículo dos se hace una descripción para nosotros. ¿Qué fue lo que se predicó? Enseñaron al pueblo y proclamaron la resurrección de los muertos en Jesús. Enseñaron y proclamaron.

    El Sanedrín se opuso a la predicación de Pedro. En Hechos capítulo cuatro, empezando a leer desde el versículo dieciocho tenemos: “Cuando los llamaron, les ordenaron no hablar ni enseñar en el nombre de Jesús. Mas respondiendo Pedro y Juan, les dijeron: Vosotros mismos juzgad si es justo delante de Dios obedecer a vosotros antes que a Dios; porque nosotros no podemos dejar de decir lo que hemos visto y oído”.

    Pedro se da cuenta de que la oposición es contra lo que está predicando y decide ser obediente a Dios incluso frente a las autoridades que están en contra. Toma la determinación de continuar hablando, de seguir dando testimonio. Así pues, en Hechos cuatro, versículo treinta y tres dice: “Con gran poder los apóstoles daban testimonio de la resurrección del Señor Jesús, y abundante gracia había sobre todos ellos”.

    He venido a dar testimonio. Vosotros sois mis testigos. Proclamar; declarar; predicar; enseñar; dar testimonio.

    La predicación provocó más persecución. En Hechos capítulo cinco versículo cuarenta y dos, en medio de la oposición y persecución, leemos: “Y todos los días, en el templo y de casa en casa, no cesaban de enseñar y predicar a Jesús como el Cristo”.

    Entonces vemos que aquí Satanás cambia su estrategia. No consigue hacerles callar por medio de la oposición y la persecución. Por consiguiente, en el capítulo seis, decide distraerles e intenta silenciarlos proporcionando una buena razón para que descuiden la predicación por verse enredados en otras actividades legítimas del reino.

    En Hechos capítulo seis leemos:

    “Por aquellos días, al multiplicarse el número de los discípulos, surgió una queja de parte de los judíos helenistas en contra de los judíos nativos, porque sus viudas eran desatendidas en la distribución diaria de los alimentos. Entonces los doce convocaron a la congregación de los discípulos, y dijeron: No es conveniente que nosotros descuidemos la palabra de Dios para servir mesas.

    Por tanto, hermanos, escoged de entre vosotros siete hombres de buena reputación, llenos del Espíritu Santo y de sabiduría, a quienes podamos encargar esta tarea. Y nosotros nos entregaremos a la oración y al ministerio de la palabra. Lo propuesto tuvo la aprobación de toda la congregación, y escogieron a Esteban, un hombre lleno de fe y del Espíritu Santo, y a Felipe, a Prócoro, a Nicanor, a Timón, a Parmenas y a Nicolás, un prosélito de Antioquía; a los cuales presentaron ante los apóstoles, y después de orar, pusieron sus manos sobre ellos”.

    Aquí, los Apóstoles tuvieron la suficiente sabiduría para ver la importancia del ministerio a las viudas necesitadas que se encontraban entre ellos. No descuidaron esa necesidad sino que dirigieron a la congregación para que reconociera a hombres que fuesen siervos y tuviesen la capacidad de tomar la responsabilidad de hacer frente a esa necesidad, por ser una preocupación necesaria del Evangelio, un ministerio de iglesia ineludible.

    Sin embargo, con todo lo necesario que pueda ser ese ministerio, no puede constituir una distracción de la predicación de la Palabra de Dios. No puede desplazar la atención de los Apóstoles y hacer que descuiden la Palabra de Dios para entregarse a esas obligaciones por muy buenas y legítimas que sean. Por tanto, los Apóstoles mantienen la prioridad de predicar y no permiten que esto, por necesario y bueno que sea, les distraiga de la Palabra de Dios.

    Lucas nos relata el resultado de esta decisión en el versículo siete: “Y la palabra de Dios crecía, y el número de los discípulos se multiplicaba en gran manera en Jerusalén, y muchos de los sacerdotes obedecían a la fe”. La Palabra de Dios siguió creciendo. Esta es la forma en que Lucas describe el éxito de predicar la Palabra de Dios: se proclamaba públicamente la Palabra de Dios, de casa en casa, testificando, predicando, dando testimonio; todo el vocabulario que describe el avance de la Palabra.

    En Hechos veinte tenemos el ejemplo del Apóstol Pablo cuando describe su ministerio entre los efesios. Observemos las palabras, el vocabulario y tomemos nota de las distintas formas que utiliza en Hechos capítulo veinte, y comenzando en el versículo dieciocho, para describir la declaración verbal y la proclamación de la Palabra de Dios.

    Cuando los ancianos de Éfeso llegan a Mileto, vienen a Pablo y él les dice:

    “Vosotros bien sabéis cómo he sido con vosotros todo el tiempo, desde el primer día que estuve en Asia, sirviendo al Señor con toda humildad, y con lágrimas y con pruebas que vinieron sobre mí por causa de las intrigas de los judíos; cómo no rehuí declarar a vosotros nada que fuera útil, y de enseñaros públicamente y de casa en casa, testificando solemnemente, tanto a judíos como a griegos, del arrepentimiento para con Dios y de la fe en nuestro Señor Jesucristo”.

    Pablo dice: “Recordad cuando vine a vosotros por primera vez. Qué destaca en vuestra mente de ese momento en el que me visteis en el entorno público, cuando me observasteis en privado, de casa en casa, ¿en qué se fijaron vuestros ojos? Mis labios —dice Pablo— estaban en continuo movimiento. Declaré, enseñé, di solemne testimonio e intenté en cada momento que las palabras penetraran en vuestros oídos por medio de la proclamación verbal”.

    Versículo veinticuatro: “Pero en ninguna manera estimo mi vida como valiosa para mí mismo, a fin de poder terminar mi carrera y el ministerio que recibí del Señor Jesús, para dar testimonio solemnemente del evangelio de la gracia de Dios”.

    Versículo veinticinco: “Y ahora, he aquí, yo sé que ninguno de vosotros, entre quienes anduve predicando el reino, volverá a ver mi rostro”. “Anduve predicando”.

    Otra vez, en el versículo veintisiete: “Pues no rehuí declarar a vosotros todo el propósito de Dios”.

    Pablo describe cada punto de su ministerio: de forma pública, privada, de principio a fin, hasta el final de su vida se dedicará a predicar, declarar, proclamar, testificar, enseñar, instruir. Será una comunicación verbal constante y continua de la Palabra de Dios.

    Cuando llega a la última carta de su vida, en el momento en que está al borde de la eternidad ¿cómo se define a sí mismo?

    Segunda de Timoteo capítulo uno versículo once. Lo vimos esta mañana. ¿Cómo se describe a sí mismo? Versículo once: “para el cual yo fui constituido predicador, apóstol y maestro”.

    He aquí mi ministerio. Es un ministerio de proclamación. Es un ministerio de declaración. Es una vida entregada a un tipo particular de comunicación: predicar y predicar.

    Dejando nuestras biblias para considerar la historia de la Iglesia, no puedo pretender hacer un estudio siglo a siglo. Sin embargo, os sugiero hermanos que penséis por un instante en un momento de la historia de la Iglesia que atraiga vuestra atención.

    Pensad por un momento en un periodo de la historia de la Iglesia que tenga un interés particular para vosotros. Me atrevería a decir que, cualquiera que sea vuestro pensamiento sobre ello ahora mismo, podéis asociarlo a la predicación y podéis nombrar a alguien de la iglesia primitiva que fuese útil y relevante a causa de la necedad de la predicación.

    Si pensáis en la Reforma, podréis pensar en hombres que fueron poderosos en el púlpito, que abrieron la Palabra de Dios y la proclamaron. Si pensáis en el Gran Avivamiento; en el Segundo Gran Avivamiento; en los movimientos del Espíritu en avivamientos regionales, nacionales, ¿qué veis con los ojos de vuestra mente? Veis un púlpito y un predicador.

    Cada vez que Dios ha tenido a bien que hubiese un avance del Evangelio en la historia, lo ha hecho por medio de la predicación. Nuestra oración es que el Espíritu descienda sobre nosotros en este lugar y nos capacite para ser portavoces del Dios que vive, que habla, que nos ha dado un libro y palabras para que podamos ser sus heraldos, sus voceros, y sus predicadores en nuestro tiempo.

    Anteriormente consideramos la prioridad de la predicación en la historia del pueblo de Dios.

    En segundo lugar, considerad conmigo la prioridad de la predicación en la vida del pueblo de Dios. Sí, la prioridad de la predicación en la vida del pueblo de Dios. En su faceta de comunidad, la iglesia es responsable de proclamar el Evangelio. Como iglesia, tiene una mayordomía para que el Evangelio avance por medio del ministerio de la predicación. La iglesia tiene varias tareas que le han sido asignadas por su Señor exaltado, pero la misión fundamental es el crecimiento del Evangelio por medio de la proclamación de un predicador.

    En primera de Timoteo capítulo tres y versículo quince leemos: “[…] te escribo para que sepas cómo debe conducirse uno en la casa de Dios, que es la iglesia del Dios vivo, columna y sostén de la verdad”.

    La Iglesia es la plataforma sobre la que se erige y se emite la Verdad. La iglesia es responsable de mantener la integridad de la doctrina de la Verdad; de emitirla y de hacerla avanzar.

    En primera de Pedro capítulo dos y versículo nueve, Pedro describe a la Iglesia como responsable de este ministerio de proclamación. “Pero vosotros sois linaje escogido, real sacerdocio, nación santa, pueblo adquirido para posesión de Dios, a fin de que anunciéis las virtudes de aquel que os llamó de las tinieblas a su luz admirable”.

    El pueblo de Dios, en tanto que comunidad, es responsable de ver que la Palabra de Dios se proclame y que su identidad de comunidad reunida es para la proclamación de ese Evangelio, para declarar las virtudes de ese Dios que es nuestro Salvador. No hay otra institución en el planeta al que se le haya dado esta responsabilidad.

    A ninguna otra organización se le ha asignado la tarea de la responsabilidad en cuanto a la Verdad, para mantenerla, proclamarla y para su crecimiento en el mundo. Si la iglesia no se asegura de que el Evangelio se proclame, este no será proclamado. Por consiguiente, la Iglesia debe convertir la predicación en su prioridad principal. La Iglesia debe establecer un ministerio bíblico de predicación y hacer lo posible para enviar a predicadores bíblicos: la prioridad de predicar en la vida del pueblo de Dios.

    Esto nos lleva a considerar, en tercer lugar, que el ministerio pastoral debe centrarse en la predicación y la enseñanza. Si el pueblo de Dios tiene la responsabilidad y la ejerce para reconocernos como hombres que tiene ese don, como hombres dotados del Espíritu para la proclamación y nos apartan para esa tarea, entonces debemos convertir la predicación y la enseñanza en el centro principal de nuestras labores. Debemos predicar el Evangelio, pues, a aquellos que nunca lo han oído ni han creído en Jesucristo.

    En segunda de Timoteo capítulo 4 y versículo cinco, vemos que debemos hacer la obra de un evangelista. Debemos buscar oportunidades para hacer la obra de evangelizar a aquellos que están fuera de Cristo; para predicar a los inconversos.

    Debemos intentar tocar la conciencia de los que no son salvos, cuando se reúnan con nosotros en nuestros cultos de adoración, para que haya una palabra que les llame a la fe y al arrepentimiento, llevándoles a una unión con Cristo. Tenemos que buscar las oportunidades cuando y donde Dios nos las de, ya sea de casa en casa o en un entorno público, en nuestra Atenas, donde hay debates, donde hay un foro para que la voz del Evangelio pueda oírse.

    Debemos adoptar medidas agresivas para proclamar el Evangelio en los oídos de aquellos que se encuentran fuera de Cristo. Pablo deja esto muy claro cuando leemos en Romanos capítulo diez, versículos trece y catorce: “Todo aquel que invoque el nombre del Señor será salvo. ¿Cómo, pues, invocarán a aquel en quien no han creído? ¿Y cómo creerán en aquel de quien no han oído? ¿Y cómo oirán sin haber quien les predique?

    Un predicador. No un director de cine, sino un predicador. No un titiritero, sino un predicador. No un coreógrafo de baile, sino un predicador. Esa es la forma en la que oirán. Y al proclamar esta necedad de la predicación, el Espíritu abrirá soberanamente sus oídos y llegarán a creer en Aquel al que están oyendo hablar.

    Prestad atención a las palabras. No dice en Aquel de quien oyen hablar sino Aquel al que oyen hablar porque la predicación del Evangelio por el Espíritu es la propia voz de Cristo para aquellos que se congregan bajo esta forma de comunicación. Oyen a Cristo en la predicación autorizada por el Espíritu. No oyen de Él, ni acerca de Él, ni con respecto a Él, sino que le oyen a Él por medio de la predicación. Por tanto, debemos intentar predicar a los inconversos.

    Asimismo, debemos predicar para la edificación de aquellos que creen, dándoles lo que Pablo denomina “todo el consejo de Dios”. En primera de Timoteo, capítulo cuatro, tenemos el mandato del Apóstol Pablo a Timoteo (primera de Timoteo capítulo cuatro leyendo desde el versículo trece):

    “Entretanto que llego, ocúpate en la lectura de las Escrituras, la exhortación y la enseñanza. No descuides el don espiritual que está en ti, que te fue conferido por medio de la profecía con la imposición de manos del presbiterio. Reflexiona sobre estas cosas, dedícate a ellas, para que tu aprovechamiento sea evidente a todos. Ten cuidado de ti mismo y de la enseñanza, persevera en estas cosas, porque haciéndolo asegurarás la salvación tanto para ti mismo como para los que te escuchan”.

    Timoteo, eres un ministro de la Palabra de Dios en la asamblea del Pueblo de Dios. Presta atención a la Palabra de Dios. Léela. Hazlo públicamente. No descuides la lectura pública, exhorta, enseña y predica. Céntrate en ello. Déjate absorber por ello, de tal modo que las personas que lleven tiempo bajo tu ministerio puedan reconocer que estás mejorando; que estás creciendo; que tu progreso sea evidente para todos. Ten cuidado de ti mismo, préstate atención porque eres el instrumento por medio del cual llega la predicación y tú mismo debes recomendarla. Vosotros sois el medio, como vimos en la hora anterior. El hombre de Dios es el medio que Dios utiliza para el crecimiento de su reino en cualquier generación.

    Juan 1:6: “Vino al mundo un hombre enviado por Dios, cuyo nombre era Juan”. Este es el método de Dios.

    El hombre; Timoteo, cuídate como hombre porque eres el instrumento. ¿Para qué? Para pronunciar la Palabra de Dios por medio de la predicación del Evangelio. Céntrate en esto. Conviértelo en tu centro de atención. Haz que sea la meta a la que te conduzca tu tiempo.

    Personalmente, hay tantas cosas en las que me gustaría tener un interés y que con el paso de los años han quedado de lado. Hubo un momento en mi vida en el que pensé que me gustaría ser una especie de músico; esto se quedó de lado. Pensé que me gustaría ser algo así como un artista. Me habría gustado aprender a dibujar y hacer bellas obras de arte. ¿Cómo puedo hacer esto y absorberme en el ministerio de la Palabra de Dios? El ministerio de la Palabra de Dios es un esfuerzo que abarca todo.

    Cualquier cosa que leo me provoca el pensamiento de cómo puedo relacionar este material con mis ovejas. Muy pocas veces leo cosas que no tengan que ver con ayudar a mi gente, a alimentarla. Cuando leo nuevas revistas estoy buscando algo que llevar a mi gente para ayudarles a entender la Palabra de Dios en relación con los días en los que vivimos.

    Tantos otros intereses y planteamientos se quedan por el camino porque tenemos que prestar atención a nosotros mismos, tenemos que atender a nuestra doctrina y debemos trabajar de forma que nuestro progreso sea evidente y estemos más centrados en esta prioridad de la predicación que nos llevará a esta última consideración.

    Debemos resistir a la tentación de descuidar la prioridad de la predicación. Debemos hacerlo. Las palabras predicar, predicación, proclamar, testificar, declarar, heraldo, anuncio, todos estos términos pueden encontrarse más de un centenar de veces en el Nuevo Testamento En realidad, el Nuevo Testamento utiliza treinta y tres verbos distintos para describir la actividad de predicar; ¡treinta y tres verbos diferentes!

    Ahora bien; cualquiera que lea su biblia con sinceridad llegará a la conclusión de que la predicación es muy importante. Predicar es muy importante y a pesar de ello, vivimos en un tiempo en el que el mensaje que se nos da como predicadores es, cada vez más, que la predicación no era importante para Pablo. Si hay algo cada vez más irrelevante en nuestra generación, eso parece ser la predicación. ¿No os da esa sensación algunas veces?

    Te sientas al lado de alguien en el avión y preguntas: ¿A qué se dedica?

    Y te contestan: “Vendo dispositivos. Quiero vender tantos como pueda y voy a cualquier sitio donde haya posibilidad de venderlos. Los dispositivos son fabulosos, déjeme hablarle sobre ellos. ¿Y usted, a qué se dedica?

    —Soy predicador.

    —Oh.

    Y en ese momento sientes como si una ventana se cerrara, ¿verdad? Rara vez te encuentras con un cálido y cordial interés.

    —¿De veras? ¡Hábleme de ello!

    Vivimos en un tiempo en el que cada vez se mira con más desprecio a los predicadores y a la predicación y lo lamentable es que esto ocurre incluso en la iglesia. Sucede aun entre aquellos que profesan ser cristianos y que, si realmente lo son, llegaron a serlo porque alguien les proclamó la Palabra de Dios.

    ¿De qué otro modo podrían haber llegado a creer de no ser por haberle oído hablar por medio de alguien? ¿Y quién fue esa persona? Un predicador. Fue alguien que testificó y proclamó.

    Con todo, parece que Satanás ha sido capaz de influenciar a muchos para que les convenza de que si hay algo que se pueda dar por sentado, algo que se pueda descuidar y descartar, es la predicación. Por tanto, no os sorprendáis de que el enemigo del alma de los hombres tome todas las medidas para desanimar a los predicadores y silenciar las predicaciones.

    Algunas veces su oposición es muy directa, muy agresiva. Suscita la oposición religiosa y política en contra de la predicación. Combina la oposición religiosa y la política para perseguir agresivamente y silenciar la predicación. La bestia de Apocalipsis trece y el falso profeta, las fuerzas políticas y religiosas, se unieron y su estrategia fue la de perseguir y silenciar a base de atemorizar con el daño físico. Esa es la estrategia en oriente, en la iglesia en oriente, en Asia, en los países islámicos.

    En nuestra situación, Satanás utiliza una estrategia más indirecta. No es la bestia del Apocalipsis sino la ramera babilónica que intenta silenciar la voz de la predicación en occidente; la tentadora y atractiva seducción de la riqueza, la conveniencia y la propia satisfacción que surge e insta a que disminuya la predicación y nos tienta para que transijamos y seamos más populares y atrayentes. Esa es la estrategia de occidente.

    Me temo que estamos viviendo en un tiempo en el que muchos que profesan ser cristianos están comprometiendo, no solo el contenido del Evangelio, sino también el método por el cual este debe comunicarse.

    En estos días, muchos nos dicen que no importa el método mientras se comunique el mensaje de alguna manera. La forma en que se haga es irrelevante, pero os sugiero que la Biblia no solo enseña el contenido del mensaje sino el método por el cual este debe ser declarado y el modo en que debe crecer. Veréis; el mensaje es el de la Cruz y el método es la necedad de la predicación. Tanto el mensaje como el método escandalizan la mente inconversa.

    En primera de Corintios capítulo uno, Pablo escribe en el versículo veintiuno:

    “Porque ya que en la sabiduría de Dios el mundo no conoció a Dios por medio de su propia sabiduría, agradó a Dios, mediante la necedad de la predicación, salvar a los que creen. Porque en verdad los judíos piden señales y los griegos buscan sabiduría; pero nosotros predicamos a Cristo crucificado, piedra de tropiezo para los judíos, y necedad para los gentiles; mas para los llamados, tanto judíos como griegos, Cristo es poder de Dios y sabiduría de Dios”.

    Los que estaban en Corinto no solo tenían dificultades con la idea de un Mesías crucificado; tampoco estaban muy contentos con Pablo. Para ellos Pablo no era muy impresionante; no pensaban que Pablo pudiera satisfacer su noción de lo que debía ser la oratoria.

    Esta genta no iban a ver una obra de teatro un viernes por la noche, no encendían su televisor; no tenían nada de esto. Lo que harían sería ir al teatro y reunirse a centenares y escuchar las grandiosas y fabulosas retóricas durante tres o cuatro horas. Se trataría de hombres de lenguaje elocuente y discursos reveladores, con ciertas formas y subsiguientes estructuras. La audiencia se sentaba y luego juzgaba y valoraba la forma en la que el hombre hablaba. Pablo llegaría hasta ellos y les hablaría.

    Yo creo que Pablo debía ser un hombre bajito y feo que había sido golpeado… ¿cuántas veces? Lo que quiero decir es que si os hubieran azotado tantas veces como a Pablo, imagino que vuestro cuerpo se vería deteriorado. No impresionaba a nadie por su apariencia y no seguía las reglas de la retórica griega.

    Él empezaba a hablar y se irritaría tanto que al comenzar a hablar diría: “En primer lugar”, y hablaría sin cesar sin llegar nunca a un “en segundo lugar”. Y todo el mundo estaría allí sentado diciendo: “Estas no son las reglas. No es así como se debe hacer. Este hombre no está siguiendo la estructura, la belleza y el orden de la retórica griega. No nos impresiona en absoluto”.

    No les gustaba la forma de comunicación de Pablo y este dice: “No voy a transigir. No estoy aquí para acatar la cultura griega, sus definiciones de lo que es un buen entretenimiento o sus expectativas acerca de lo que es necesario para reunir a una multitud y complacer a una audiencia.

    No es este el juego al que estamos jugando aquí. Estamos tratando con el alma de los hombres. Estamos tratando con la Palabra de Dios. Estamos hablando a personas que se hallan a tan solo unos segundos de la eternidad y tenemos una mayordomía. No estamos aquí para entretener. No estamos aquí para hacer cosquillas en los oídos. No estamos aquí para satisfacer a una audiencia.

    Estamos aquí para declarar la Palabra del Dios vivo y, al hacerlo, hablaremos de una forma que no tendrá por objetivo el gusto artístico estético de la presentación. Nuestro objetivo es su conciencia. Hablaremos de las consecuencias de su pecado y lo haremos con un celo y una pasión que transmitirá una autoridad que viene del mismo trono de Dios.

    Hablaremos un mensaje que humillará el orgullo de los hombres. Haremos un llamamiento para que midan su vida por el rasero de la ley de Dios y vean que tienen carencias; que sepan que son pecadores, transgresores de la ley y podamos llevarles, en esa condición quebrantada, a ver esa gracia de Dios otorgada en un Mesías crucificado cuya sangre hace expiación del pecado; por cuya muerte se propicia la ira de Dios, por cuya resurrección se ha vencido a la muerte, se ha derrotado a Satanás y el nuevo mundo ha amanecido sobre nosotros por medio del don y el ministerio del Espíritu.

    Esto no va a encajar en las categorías del entretenimiento cultural. Es una palabra que viene del cielo, es un anuncio de Dios y viene por un medio, a través de un instrumento. Viene por medio de un hombre y de la proclamación. El propio mensaje se alinea con el método porque este parece necio.

    El método parece necio y el mensaje suena a locura, pero en la sabiduría de Dios su necedad es más sabia que la sabiduría de los hombres. Por tanto, el mensaje y el método están designados para humillar a los hombres y llevarles a un lugar de arrepentimiento y fe en Jesucristo.

    Apelo a vosotros, hermanos, para que escuchéis la voz de vuestro Maestro y hagáis inventario de vuestra herencia; a que os identifiquéis como he intentado hacer durante esta hora y que rastreéis el pedigrí, el honor, la dignidad de vuestra labor remontándoos hasta Enoc y siguiendo el pasillo de honor dado a los predicadores, de los cuales Cristo mismo es el más honorable.

    Apartad vuestros oídos de las voces que gritan hoy en día, a veces desde nuestros bancos de iglesia y nos dicen: “¡Dejemos la predicación de lado, no seamos tan serios en cuanto a ella! No nos centremos tanto en la predicación, no nos comprometamos tanto a predicar. Quizás deberíamos utilizar otro método; quizás deberíamos probar una forma distinta de comunicación.

    Hermanos, es posible que una de las razones por la que se ataca la predicación en nuestros días es porque hay muy pocos hombres que se entreguen a la difícil y poco convincente tarea de la predicación, que estudian para mostrarse aprobados; son obreros que no necesitan ser avergonzados, que manejan cuidadosamente la Palabra de Dios que los entrega a estas cosas y se asegura de que su progreso sea evidente para todos.

    Quizás una de las razones por las cuales la predicación se ha desprestigiado es por culpa nuestra, porque no estamos trabajando duro en la predicación. Por tanto, no debemos sorprendernos cuando la gente dice: “No estoy interesado en la predicación. Necesitamos convertirnos en mejores predicadores, no debemos descartar la predicación y tenemos que quedar avisados de no remplazar la predicación con música, con obras de teatro, baile, videos y tiempos de testimonio. Debemos dedicarnos a predicar.

    Veamos lo que Pablo nos dice en segunda de Timoteo capítulo cuatro, el mandamiento del hombre que está a punto de morir. ¿Qué dice a su joven hijo en la fe? Segunda de Timoteo cuatro, versículo uno:

    “Te encargo solemnemente, en la presencia de Dios y de Cristo Jesús, que ha de juzgar a los vivos y a los muertos, por su manifestación y por su reino: Predica la palabra, insiste a tiempo y fuera de tiempo; redarguye, reprende, exhorta con mucha paciencia e instrucción. Porque vendrá tiempo cuando no soportarán la sana doctrina, sino que teniendo comezón de oídos, acumularán para sí maestros conforme a sus propios deseos; y apartarán sus oídos de la verdad, y se volverán a mitos. Pero tú, sé sobrio en todas las cosas, sufre penalidades, haz el trabajo de un evangelista, cumple tu ministerio”.

    ¿Cuál es ese ministerio? Predicar la Palabra.

    Predicar la Palabra. Amén

    Oremos:

    Bendito Padre y Dios nuestro: pedimos el don de tu Espíritu que venga sobre nosotros como siervos de Jesucristo. Dios mío, confesamos que con frecuencia nos desanimamos en nuestros esfuerzos por predicar Tu Palabra. Con frecuencia nos enfrentamos a retos y dificultades que vienen del mundo que nos rodea; que llegan incluso de personas que profesan ser cristianas; que proceden incluso de cristianos bien intencionados; retos que surgen incluso dentro de nuestra propia alma.

    Dios mío pedimos que, tras haber realizado este estudio acerca de la prioridad de la predicación para el hombre de Dios, que decidamos de nuevo ser los mejores predicadores posibles; que manejemos cuidadosamente la Palabra de Verdad y proclamemos la Palabra de Dios con palabras de nuestra biblia; que podamos ser fieles a esta mayordomía que nos has dado.

    Te damos gracias por habernos llamado para esta obra. Ahora te pedimos que nos equipes para la tarea que debemos hacer, para que seamos fieles en nuestra generación, así como Pablo, para que terminemos nuestra carrera, para que podamos correr, ser fieles, entregar nuestra vida a la proclamación, el testimonio, la predicación, el glorioso Evangelio de Jesucristo en cuyo nombre te lo pedimos todo. Amén.

    © Copyright | Derechos Reservados[/toggle][toggle title=»Text in English» open=»no»]It’s my delight to be with you once again this year. Last year, when we were together, I was assigned the topic of the priorities of the pastor.

    And this year I’m going to resume on that subject picking up where we left off. Last year, we considered the priorities of the pastor in relation to himself, the care of the pastor to himself and then we saw the priority of the pastor in relation to his family and then we invested two studies on the priority of worship.

    This year we’re going to consider the priority of preaching, in this hour, and then the priority of prayer and then the priority of shepherding and, lastly, the priority of our witness to the world.

    In this hour we look then, to the priority of preaching.

    Charles Spurgeon writes, “We want again Luthers, Bunyans, Calvins, Whitfields, men who are fit to mark their errors, whose names breathe terror into our enemies ears.[”?] We have dire need of such men, from where will they come? They are gifts of Christ to the church and will come in due time. He has given—He has power to give us back again a golden age of preachers, a time as fertile of great divines and mighty ministers as was the puritan age. And when the good old truth was once again preached by men whose lips are touched as with a life coal from off the altar. This shall be the instrument in the hand of the Spirit for bringing about a great and thorough revival of religion in the land. I do not look for any other means of converting men beyond the simple preaching of the gospel and the opening of men’s ears to hear it. The moment the church of God shall despise the pulpit, God will despise her. It has been through the ministry of preaching that the Lord has always been pleased to revive and bless His churches.”

    Pastor Meadows is going to be focusing in his survey on 2nd Timothy with our stewardship of the gospel and the content of that gospel. My focus in this hour is more as to the method by which that gospel is to be communicated and so we’re going to survey several passages as to what the Bible has to say about this method, the method of preaching.

    So we look first of all at the priority of preaching in the history of God’s people. We want to look to the ancient past for a moment and recognize God’s dealings with His people has always been through preachers. We read of Enoch in Genesis chapter 5 and verse 24 that he walked with God and he was not for God took him. God demonstrated His power over death in His dealings with Enoch. A very mysterious man, a significant man, and Jude tells us in Jude 1 and verse 14 that Enoch was a preacher.

    Enoch, in the seventh generation from Adam, prophesied or preached, says Jude in June [Jude] 1:14 and his message is that of judgment, that God would come to exercise judgment. We look at the Old Testament character of Noah, we both, most remember him for his constructing of the arc, but Peter tells us in 2nd Peter 2:5 that he was a preacher of righteousness.

    Abraham, whose life is given to us again in the pages of Genesis. We read in Genesis 18:19, “I have chosen him in order that he may command his children and his household after him to keep the way of the Lord by doing righteousness and justice in order that the Lord may bring upon Abraham what he has spoken about him. Abraham was entrusted with the word of God that he commanded to his family and his family, his household, consisted of several hundred people. In Genesis 14, we are told that from his household, three hundred eighteen men were raised to fight against the four kings.

    He commanded his children and his household to keep the way of the Lord, Abraham is said in Genesis chapter 20 and verse 7 to be a prophet. Abraham was a preacher of the Word of God.

    Likewise, Moses was a preacher. He received words from God and then proclaimed those words to the Israelites. Much of the Pentateuch, the first five books of the Bible records the words of Moses to the children of Israel. He preached to the assembled people of God.

    When we consider the Old Testament prophets, Isaiah, Jeremiah, Ezekiel, Jonah, Amos, Haggai, Malachai, Habbakuk. We look at these men and see something common to each one. Although they lived in different situations and ministered in different circumstances, they were each preachers, proclaimers of the Word of God.

    We turn in our Bibles to the first of several passages that I want us now to see and read from Scripture when we consider the ministry of John the Baptist in Mark chapter 1 and verse 4. Mark 1 and verse 4. John the Baptist appeared in the Wilderness preaching a baptism of repentance for the forgiveness of sin. The ordinance of Baptism defined John’s ministry. That was the activity that characterized John. He is called the Baptist, but his ministry was that of a preacher. He was one who preached a baptism of repentance for forgiveness of sins.

    When we look at our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ we know that the supreme purpose for which He came was to make atonement for our sins by His death on the cross and His triumph over death in the resurrection, His victory over Satan as our deliverer, but the ministry of Jesus made priority of preaching.

    In Mark chapter 1, we read in verse 14 and 15, “Now after John had been taken into custody, Jesus came into Galilee preaching the gospel of God and saying, ‘The time is fulfilled and the kingdom of God is at hand, repent and believe the gospel.”

    Jesus came preaching. Again, chapter 1, verse 38 of Mark’s gospel. “Jesus said to them, ‘Let us go somewhere else to the towns nearby so that I may preach there also, for that is what I came for and he went into their synagogues throughout Galilee, preaching and casting out demons.”

    Jesus’ works of power were demonstrations of validating, validating the Word that He was proclaiming.

    In Luke chapter 4 we’re given the message of Christ to His home town of Nazareth. We read in verse 18 and 19 that which is His Messianic mandate derived from the prophet Isaiah, “The Spirit of the Lord is upon Me because He has anointed Me to preach the gospel to the poor. He has sent Me to proclaim to the captives, release to the captives and recovery of sight to the blind. to set free those who are oppressed, to proclaim the favorable year of the Lord.” Jesus’ ministry is one of proclamation, it is one of preaching and the gospels record to us many of Jesus sermons.

    In Matthew chapter 7 we come to the conclusion of the Sermon on the Mount and we read the final words in verse 28 and verse 29, “When Jesus had finished these words the crowds were amazed at His teaching for He was teaching them as one having authority and not as the scribes. The people were astonished, not only at what He said but the way in which He said it, the method of His communication. It was a manifestation of power. It was a manifestation of authority.

    Those in John 7, verse 46, who were sent to capture Jesus were met up by His preaching. They heard Him preaching and they returned empty handed and they said, “Never did a man speak in the way that this man speaks.”

    When He was brought before Pilate in John 18, He tells Pilate in verse 37, “For this I have been born and for this I have come into the world to bear witness to the truth. Everyone who is of the truth hears My voice.”

    To bear witness to the truth requires a voice. It is describing Jesus preaching ministry, a ministry of words that made men accountable to God having heard His witness to the truth.

    Jesus was a preacher and He commissioned His apostles, likewise, to be preachers.

    Again, in the gospel of Mark chapter 3, Mark 3, verse 14 and 15. “And He appointed twelve so that they would be with Him and that He could send them out to preach and to have authority to cast out demons.” The powers of darkness are attacked through the medium of preaching the gospel.

    When we come to the ministry of these men in the book of Acts, we turn to Acts chapter 1 reading from verse 8. “You will receive power when the Holy Spirit has come upon you and you shall be My witnesses both in Jerusalem and in all Judea and Samara, Samaria and even to the remotest part of the earth.”
    To be a witness is to take responsibility for the message, for the Word, to preach this gospel and this, indeed, becomes the focus of apostolic ministry.

    In Acts chapter 2 we see Peter doing what? He is preaching. We notice, in verse 14, Peter taking his stand “with the eleven raised his voice and declared to them”

    Peter proclaims a message, he preaches a sermon, a sermon derived from three Old Testament texts with three main points in his sermon, the application driving to men’s consciences to bring them to faith in Christ Jesus. We read verse 40, “and with many other words he solemnly testified and kept on exhorting them saying, be saved from this perverse generation.”

    When Acts chapter 2 is considered and the only thing recognized there is that people spoke in tongues, you’re not seeing what the Spirit has given to us in Acts chapter 2. It is a record of a sermon. It is the account of a preacher who opens the Word of God and preaches from Joel and preaches from the Psalms and declares Christ crucified, risen and urges men to repentance and faith.

    In Acts chapter 3 the Lord uses Peter to heal a lame man and what does that bring? An opportunity for preaching, the second sermon recorded in Acts chapter 3. It’s described for us in Acts 4 and verse 2. What was it that was preached? They were teaching the people and proclaiming in Jesus the resurrection from the dead. They were teaching; they were proclaiming.

    Peter’s preaching was then opposed by the Sanhedrin. In Acts chapter 4 reading in verse 18:

    “and when they had summoned them they commanded them not to speak or to teach at all in the name of Jesus, but Peter and John answered and said to them, ‘whether it is right in the sight of God to heed to you or rather to God, you be the judge for we cannot stop speaking about what we have seen and heard.’”

    Peter realizes that it is his preaching that is being opposed and he determines to be obedient to God even in the face of opposing authorities and resolves to continue speaking to continue bearing witness so in Acts 4, verse 33, “with great power the apostles were giving testimony to the resurrection of the Lord Jesus and abundant grace was upon them all.”

    I have come to bear witness. You are My witnesses. Proclaim. Declare. Preach. Teach. Give testimony.

    The preaching brought on more persecution. In Acts chapter 5 verse 42, in the midst of the opposition and persecution we read, “And everyday in the temple and from house to house they kept right on teaching and preaching Jesus as the Christ.”

    Satan here then changes his strategy. He’s not able to shut them up by opposition and persecution so in chapter 6, he decides to distract them and attempt to silence them by a good reason that they might neglect preaching having been caught up in other legitimate kingdom pursuits. We read in Acts chapter 6, “Now at this time while the disciples were increasing in number a complaint arose from the part of the Hellenistic Jews against the native Hebrews because their widows were being overlooked in the daily serving of food. So the twelve summoned the congregation of the disciples and said, “It is not desirable for us to neglect the Word of God in order to serve tables. Therefore, brethren, select from among you seven men of good reputation full of the Spirit and of wisdom whom we may put in charge of this task, but we will devote ourselves to prayer and to the ministry of the Word. The statement found approval with the whole congregation and they chose Stephen, a man full of faith and of the Holy Spirit, and Philip, and Prochorus, and Nicanor, and Timon, and Parmenas, and Nicolaus, a proselyte of Antioch.

    And these they brought before the apostles and after praying, they laid their hands on them.”

    The apostles here were wise enough to see the importance of ministering to the needy widows among them. They do not neglect that need, but rather direct the congregation to recognize men who are servants who will be able then to take responsibility to meet that need for this is a necessary gospel concern, a necessary church ministry, but as necessary as that ministry is, it cannot distract from the preaching of the Word of God. It cannot displace the attentions of the apostles and cause them to neglect the Word of God in order to give themselves to these very good and legitimate concerns so the apostles maintain the priority of preaching and they don’t allow even a good and necessary thing to distract them from the Word of God.

    Luke tells us the result of that decision, verse 7, “The Word of God kept on spreading, and the number of the disciples continued to increase greatly in Jerusalem and a great many of the priests were becoming obedient to the faith.” The Word of God kept on spreading.” That is Luke’s way of describing the success of the preaching of the Word of God: the Word of God being proclaimed publicly from house to house, testifying, preaching, witnessing, all of these vocabulary that describe the Word being advanced.

    We look at the example of the apostle Paul when he describes his ministry among the Ephesians in Acts chapter 20, look at the words, look at his vocabulary and notice in Acts chapter 20, beginning in verse 18, how many ways he describes verbal declaration, proclamation of the Word of God. When the elders from Ephesus arrive at Miletus, they came to Paul and he said to them, “You yourselves know from the first day that I set foot in Asia how I was with you the whole time serving the Lord with all humility and with tears and with trials which came upon me through the plots of the Jews, how I did not shrink from declaring to you anything that was profitable and teaching you publicly and from house to house, solemnly testifying to you to both Jews and Greeks of repentance toward God and faith in our Lord Jesus Christ.”

    Paul says, “Remember when I first came among you. What is it that stands out in your mind when you saw me in the public setting, when you saw me privately from house to house, where were your eyes focused? My lips,” said Paul, “my lips, they were always moving. I was declaring, I was teaching. I was solemnly testifying, I was endeavoring at every point to get the words into your ears through verbal proclamation.”

    Verse 24, “I did not consider my life of any account as dear to myself so that I may finish my course and the ministry which I received from the Lord Jesus to testify solemnly of the gospel of the grace of God. Here is Paul’s focus, here is his priority, to testify of the gospel of the grace of God.

    Verse 25, “Behold, I know that,” “Behold I know that all of you among whom I went about preaching the kingdom will no longer see my face.” I went about preaching.

    And again, verse 27, “I did not shrink from declaring to you the whole purpose of God.”

    Paul describes his ministry at every point, public, private, from the beginning all the way through the end, all to the end of his life, what he’s going to do is preach, declare, proclaim, testify, teach, instruct, constant, continued, verbal communication of the Word of God.

    When he comes to the last letter of his life, when he now stands on the brink of eternity, what does he define himself to be? 2nd Timothy chapter 1 verse 11, we saw it this morning, how does he describe himself? Verse 11, “I was was appointed a preacher and an apostle and a teacher.”

    Here is my ministry. It is a ministry of proclamation. It is a ministry of declaration. It is a life that is given to a particular kind of communication: preaching, preaching.

    When we turn from our Bibles to consider, secondly, the history of the church and I, I cannot presume to survey the history of the church in its centuries, but I submit to you, brethren, to think for a moment of a time in the history of the church that attracts your attention.

    Think for a moment of some period in the history of the church that has peculiar interest to you and I will venture to say whatever you’re happening to think about right now you can associate that period of history with preaching, you can name someone in the early church who was useful and significant because of the foolishness of preaching.

    You think of the Reformation and you can think of men who were powerful in the pulpit, men who opened the Word of God and proclaimed it. You think of the Great Awakening. you think of the Second Great Awakening; you think of the of the movements of the Spirit in revival, regional, national, and what do you see in your mind’s eye? You see a pulpit and you see a preacher.

    Whenever God has been pleased in history to advance the gospel, He has done so through preaching. It’s our prayer in this place that the Spirit would come upon us and enable us to be mouthpieces for the God who lives, the God who speaks, the God who has given us a book, the God who has given us words that we might be His heralds, His proclaimers, preachers in our day.

    Consider with me the priority of preaching in the life of God’s people. The priority of preaching in the life of God’s people. The church as a community is responsible to proclaim the gospel. The church as church has as stewardship for the advancement of the gospel through the ministry of preaching. The church has several tasks assigned to it by her exalted Lord, but central to those tasks is the advancement of the gospel through the proclamation of a preacher.

    In 1st Timothy chapter 3 and verse 15, “I write so that you will know how to, how one ought to conduct himself in the household of God which is the church of the living God, the pillar and the support of the truth.”

    The church is the platform upon which the truth is erected and launched. The church is responsible to maintain the integrity of the doctrine of the truth and the church is responsible for the launching forth, the advancement of that truth.

    In 1st Peter chapter 2 and verse 9, Peter describes the church as church as responsible for this proclaiming ministry. You are a chosen race a royal priesthood a holy nation, a people for God’s own possession so that you may proclaim the excellencies of Him who has called you out of darkness into His marvelous light.”

    The people of God as a community are responsible to see that the Word of God is proclaimed and their identity as a gathered community is for the proclamation of that gospel for the declaration of the excellencies of the God who is our Savior. There is no other institution in the planet who is given that responsibility. There is no other organization who is assigned the task of the responsibility for truth and for its maintenance and for its proclamation and advancement in the world. If the church does not ensure that the gospel is proclaimed then the gospel will not be proclaimed. The church therefore must make preaching a top priority. The church must establish a biblical preaching ministry and seek to send forth biblical preachers: the priority of preaching in the life of God’s people.

    Which brings us, then, to consider, thirdly, the pastoral ministry must focus on preaching and teaching. If it is the responsibility of the people of God and they exercise that responsibility in recognizing us as men gifted, as men as men endowed of the Spirit to proclaim and they set us aside for this task, then we must make preaching and teaching primary focus of our labors. We must preach the gospel, certainly, then to those who have never heard or never believed in Jesus Christ.

    We must, in 2nd Timothy chapter 4 and verse 5, we must do the work of an evangelist. We must seek opportunities to do the work of gospelling those who are outside of Christ, seeking to preach to the unconverted, seeking to address the consciences of the unsaved when they assemble with us in our worship services so that there is a word to those who are outside of Christ to call them to faith and repentance and bring them into union with Christ and we must seek opportunities whenever and wherever God gives us opportunity, house to house or in a public setting in our Athens, where there are discussions, where there is a forum for the voice of the gospel to be heard.

    We need to take aggressive steps to proclaim the gospel into the ears of those who are outside of Christ. Paul makes this evident when we read in Romans chapter 10 and verse 13 and 14, “whoever will call upon the name of the Lord will be saved. How then will they call upon Him in whom they have not believed? How will they believe in Him whom they have not heard and how will they hear without a preacher?”

    A preacher. Not a movie director, a preacher. Not a puppeteer, a preacher. Not a dance choreographer, a preacher. That’s how they will hear. And through the foolishness of preaching preached the Spirit sovereignly will open their ears and they will come to believe in Him whom they hear. Notice the words. Not, in Him of whom they hear but Him whom they hear for the preaching of the gospel by the Spirit is the very voice of Christ to those who are assembled underneath this form of communication. They hear Christ in Spirit empowered preaching. Not of Him, not about Him, not concerning Him, they hear Him through preaching. We must therefore endeavor to preach to the unconverted.

    We must also preach for the edification of those who believe, giving to them what Paul calls the whole counsel of God. We read in 1st Timothy chapter 4 the mandate of the apostle Paul to Timothy in 1st Timothy chapter 4 reading from verse 13. “Until I come give attention to the public reading of Scripture to exhortation and teaching. Do not neglect the Spiritual gift within you which was bestowed on you through prophetic utterance with the laying on of hands by the presbytery. Take pains with these things. Be absorbed in them so that your progress will be evident to all. Pay close attention to yourself and to your teaching, persevere in these things for as you do this you will ensure salvation both for yourself and for those who hear you.”

    Timothy, you’re a minister of the Word of God in the assembly of God’s people. Give attention to the Word of God. Read it. Read it publicly. Don’t neglect the public reading and exhort and teach and preach. Make this your focus. Be absorbed in this, so much so that people who sit under your ministry over a lengthy period of time can recognize that you’re making improvement, that you’re growing, that your progress is evident toward all. Watch yourself, pay attention to yourself, because you are the instrument through which the preaching comes and you yourself must commend the preaching. You are the means as we learned in the last hour. The man of God is the means that God uses to advance His kingdom in any generation.

    John 1:6, “There came a man sent from God whose name was John. That’s God’s method.

    The man, Timothy, watch yourself as the man because you’re the instrument. For what? For the sounding of the Word of God through the preaching of the gospel. Be absorbed in this. Make this your focus. Make this the driving goal of your time. So many things I can say personally that I would like to have an interest in that over the years that have just fallen to the side. There was a one point in my life I thought I would like to have been something of a musician; it’s just fallen to the side. I thought at one point I’d like to be something of of an artist. I would like to have learned how to draw and, and, and do nice art work. How can I do that and be absorbed in the ministry of the Word of God? The ministry of the Word of God is an all encompassing endeavor.

    Whatever I read I always have a mind, how can I bring this material to bear upon my sheep? I very seldom read anything except it is not in relation to helping my people, to feed them. When I read news magazine, I am looking for something to bring to my people to help them understand the Word of God in relation to the days in which we live. So many other interests and focus go off to the side because we have to pay attention to ourselves, we have to pay attention to our doctrine and we have to labor in such a way that our progress becomes evident and we become that much more focused on this priority of preaching, which is to bring us to this last consideration. We must withstand the temptation to neglect the priority of preaching.

    We must withstand the temptation to neglect the priority of preaching. The words preach, preaching, proclaim, testify, declare, herald, announce, all of these terms can be found over one hundred times in the New Testament. In fact, the New Testament uses thirty-three different verbs to describe the activity of preaching, thirty-three different verbs. Now, anybody who reads their Bible with some honesty is going to come to the conclusion that preaching is very important. Preaching is very important, and yet we live in a day where increasingly the message that we’re being told as preachers is that preaching is not important to Paul. If there’s one thing that is irrelevant in our generation, increasingly, it seems, preaching. Don’t you feel that sometimes?

    You sit down next to somebody in the airplane, “What do you do?”

    And they tell you, “I sell widgets. I wanna sell as many widgets as I can and I’m getting everywhere I possibly can to sell widgets. Widgets are great, let me tell you about my widgets. What do you do?”

    “I’m a preacher.”

    “Oh.”

    You feel like a window gets rolled up, right? Very seldom do you meet with a warm welcoming interest, “Really? Tell me about that.”

    Increasingly we’re living in a day where preachers and preaching is looked down upon and sadly that happens even in the church. That happens even among those who profess to be Christians, who if they are Christians became Christians because somebody proclaimed the Word of God to them. How else could they have believed unless they hear Him speaking through, what? A preacher. A testifier. A proclaimer.

    And yet it seems that Satan has been able to influence many to convince them that the thing that we can take for granted, the thing that we can neglect, the thing that we can discard is preaching. So, don’t be surprised that the enemy of men’s souls takes every measure to discourage preachers and to silence preaching.

    Sometimes his opposition is very direct, very aggressive. He arouses religious opposition to preaching and he arouses political opposition to preaching and he brings the combination of religious and political opposition together in order to aggressively persecute and silence the preaching, the beast of Revelation 13 and the false prophet, political and religious forces come together in a strategy to persecute and silence out of fear of bodily harm. This is the strategy in the Easter, the church in the East, in Asia, in Islamic countries.

    Our situation is one where Satan uses a more indirect strategy, not the beast in Revelation but the Babylonian harlot is the indirect strategy that attempts to silence the voice of preaching in the West, the seductive enticing allurement of affluence and convenience and self-centered indulgences that rise up and urge preaching to be diminished and entice us to make compromises in order that we might become more popular and appealing. Here is the strategy in the West. I fear we’re living in a day when many professed Christians are compromising not only the content of the gospel but the method by which the gospel is to be communicated. Many are telling us in our day that the method doesn’t matter as long as somehow the message is communicated, the way in which it’s communicated is irrelevant, but I submit to you that the Bible teaches not only the content of the message but the method by which the message is to be declared, is to be advanced. You see the message is the message of the cross and the method is the foolishness of preaching and both the message and the method scandalize the unconverted mind. In 1st Corinthians chapter 1, Paul writes in verse 21, “For since in the wisdom of God the world through its wisdom did not come to know God, God was well pleased through the foolishness of the preaching preached to save those who believe, for indeed Jews ask for signs and Greeks search for wisdom, but we preach Christ crucified, to Jews a stumbling block and to Gentiles foolishness, but to those who are the called, both Jews and Greeks, Christ the power of God and the wisdom of God.”

    You see, those at Corinth not only had difficulty with the idea of a crucified Messiah, they also were not, they we—they were not very pleased with Paul. They didn’t think that Paul was very impressive, they didn’t think that Paul, that Paul really satisfied their understanding of what oratory should be.

    You see, these are people, they didn’t go down to a movie theater on Friday night, they didn’t turn on their television, they didn’t have any of that, what they would do was that they would go down to the, to, to the theater and gather by the hundreds and listen to grand and great rhetoric for three, four hours at at time. Men who would come in with eloquent language and eloquent speech and who had certain forms and structures that followed and the audience sat and then they would judge and they would make assessments of the way the man spoke and Paul would come and talk to them and here’s this man and I think Paul, frankly, was a very ugly little man, he had been beaten up how many times? I mean if you had been beaten up as many times as Paul had been beaten up, I imagine your body was looking a bit worn, hm. He didn’t impress anybody by his appearance and he didn’t follow the rules of Greek rhetoric, he would start to speak and his passions would get so riled up, he would begin and he would say, “First of all,” and then he would go and he would never get to a second of all. And everybody sitting, “That’s not the rules. That’s not how this is to be done. This man isn’t following the structure and the beauty and the arrangement of Greek rhetoric. He’s not very impressive at all.”

    And they didn’t like the way Paul communicated and Paul says, “I’m not gonna compromise. I’m not here in order to comply with Greek culture and with its definitions of what good entertainment is all about and its expectations about what is necessary in order to gather a crowd and please an audience.

    That’s not the game that we’re playing here. We’re dealing with men’s souls. We’re dealing with the Word of God. We’re speaking to people who are only seconds away from eternity and we have a stewardship. We’re not here to entertain. We’re not here to tickle ears. We’re not here to satisfy an audience. We’re here to declare the Word of the Living God and in so doing we’re going to speak in such a way that’s going to target not men’s aesthetic artistic taste of presentation, we’re going to target their consciences. We’re going to speak to the issues of their sin and we’re going to talk with a zeal and a passion that communicates an authority that comes from the very throne of God and we’re going to speak a message that is going to humble men’s pride and we’re going to call them to measure their lives by the standard’s of God’s law and discover themselves wanting, to learn that their sinners, lawbreakers and to bring them in that condition of brokenness to see that grace of God granted in a crucified Messiah by whose blood sin is atoned for, by whose death the wrath of God is propitiated, by whose resurrection death has been conquered, Satan has been vanquished and the new world has dawned upon us through the gift and ministry of the Spirit.

    This is not going to fit into the categories of cultural entertainment. This is a word from heaven, this is an announcement from God and it comes through a medium, its comes through a vehicle, it comes through a man and it comes by proclamation and the message itself aligns with the method, for the method looks foolish. The method looks foolish and the message sounds foolish but in the wisdom of God, His foolishness is wiser than the wisdom of men and both the message and the method are designed to humble men and to bring them to a place of repentance and faith in Jesus Christ.

    I appeal to you brethren to hear the voice of your Master and to take stock of your heritage, to identify yourselves as I’ve attempted to do in this hour and trace the pedigree, the honor, the dignity of your labor all the way back to Enoch and follow the hall of honor given to preachers, the most honorable being Christ Himself and turn your ears away from the voices that are crying out today often times even from our pews that are telling us, “Let’s push preaching off to the side, let’s not be that serious about preaching. Let’s not be that focused upon preaching, let’s not be that committed to preaching. Maybe we should be using another method, maybe we should be trying a different way to communicate.

    Brethren, maybe one of the reasons that preaching is being attacked in our day is because there are so few men that are giving themselves to the hard work invalid in preaching, who are studying to show themselves approved, workmen who need not to be ashamed, ha— accurately handling the Word of God who gives themselves to these things and make sure their progress is obvious toward all. Maybe one of the reasons preaching has fallen into disrepute is our fault because we’re not working hard at preaching! So, we ought not to be surprised sometimes when people say, I’m not interested in the preaching, but we need to become better preachers, not to discard preaching and we need to be warned not to replace preaching with music, not to replace preaching with drama and dance and video and testimony times.

    We need to give ourselves to preaching.

    We look at what Paul tells us in 2nd Timothy chapter 4, the mandate of the man about to die, what does he say to his young son in the faith? 2nd Timothy 4 and verse 1, “I solemnly charge you in the presence of God and of Christ Jesus who is to judge the living and the dead and by His appearing and His kingdom, preach the Word. Be ready in season, out of season, reprove, rebuke, exhort with great patience and instruction for the time will come when they will not endure sound doctrine but wanting to have their ears tickled they will accumulate for themselves teachers in accordance with their own desires and will turn away their ears from the truth and will turn aside to myths, but you be sober in all things, endure hardship, do the work of an evangelist and fulfill your ministry.” Which is what? Preach the Word.

    Preach the Word. Amen.

    Let’s pray

    Our Gracious Father and our God we do ask for the endowment of Your Spirit to come upon us as servants of Jesus Christ, we confess our God that we are often discouraged in our efforts to preach Your Word. We are often confronted with challenges and difficulties that come to us from the world round about us, that come to us even from professed Christians, that come to us even from well-meaning Christians, challenges that arise even within our own souls and our God we would pray that having seen this survey of the priority of preaching for the man of God, that we would resolve afresh to be the best preachers that we can be, accurately handling the Word of Truth and proclaiming the Word of God with words from our Bibles that we might be faithful to this stewardship that You have given to us. We thank You that You have called us into this work, now we pray, equip us for the work that we must do that we might be faithful in our generation even as Paul to finish our race, to run our course, to be faithful, to give our lives for the proclamation, testimony, the preaching, the glorious gospel of Jesus Christ in whose name we pray. Amen.

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  • Conferencia Pastoral 2007 | Journey into Marital Intimacy: Grace of Gospel Love I

    [two_third last=»no» spacing=»yes» center_content=»no» hide_on_mobile=»no» background_color=»» background_image=»» background_repeat=»no-repeat» background_position=»left top» hover_type=»none» link=»» border_position=»all» border_size=»0px» border_color=»» border_style=»» padding=»» margin_top=»» margin_bottom=»» animation_type=»» animation_direction=»» animation_speed=»0.1″ animation_offset=»» class=»» id=»»][fusion_text]Journey into Marital Intimacy: Grace of Gospel Love I[/fusion_text][separator style_type=»none» top_margin=»» bottom_margin=»» sep_color=»» border_size=»» icon=»» icon_circle=»» icon_circle_color=»» width=»» alignment=»» class=»» id=»»][accordian divider_line=»» class=»» id=»»][toggle title=»Video» open=»no»][/toggle][toggle title=»Audio» open=»no»]

    [dlaudio link=»https://www.conferenciapastoral.org/wp-content/uploads/Sermones/2007_05_22_0800_Journey_into_Marital_Intimacy_Grace_of_Gospel_Love_I_Matthew_19_10_Dr_Alan_J_Dunn.mp3″]Download Audio[/dlaudio][/toggle][toggle title=»Texto» open=»no»][/toggle][/accordian][/two_third][one_third last=»yes» spacing=»yes» center_content=»no» hide_on_mobile=»no» background_color=»» background_image=»» background_repeat=»no-repeat» background_position=»left top» hover_type=»none» link=»» border_position=»all» border_size=»0px» border_color=»» border_style=»» padding=»» margin_top=»» margin_bottom=»» animation_type=»» animation_direction=»» animation_speed=»0.1″ animation_offset=»» class=»» id=»»][/one_third]

  • Biografía: Reseña biográfica de Richard Baxter

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    noble-vater033020151121Noble Vater

    Reseña biográfica de Richard Baxter

    Richard Baxter (1615-1691)
    Notas sobre su vida y ministerio

    Fuentes de información para estas notas

    He recogido información de varios escritos. Muchos autores confiesan que mucha de su información procede de un libro autobiográfico (Reliquiae Baxterianae), pero no he tenido el tiempo de ojear (mucho menos leer) esa obra de 800 páginas. Gran parte de lo que sigue la he tomado del libro Meet the Puritans (MP) por Joel Beeke y Randall J Pedersen1; también la introducción de J I Packer (JP) que se encuentra en español en El Pastor Renovado (Banner of Truth, 2009) y el prefacio de ese mismo libro por William Brown, el cual publicó la edición del libro que fue traducido a español. Además, en la edición de El Reposo Eterno de los Santos de CLIE (sin fecha) traducida por David Vila, hay una Nota a Modo de Prefacio que ofrece unos puntos de valor. No sé quien escribió esa “Nota”, porque sólo aparecen las iniciales “BF” con la anotación “Kidderminster, 25 diciembre 1758”. También he leído las introducciones y prefacios de Tomo I de The Christian Directory (¿publicado por Sovereign Grace Publishers hacia los fines del siglo pasado?) que contienen información interesante e instructivo. Me gusta mucho un artículo breve (5 páginas) por Lynell Friesen (LF) publicado en IIIM Magazine, Volume 2, Number 27, July 3 to July 9, 2000 titulado The Work and Thought of Richard Baxter (disponible gratis en PDF)2.

    Problemas con la teología de Baxter, o ¿por qué considerar su vida y escritos?

    En la Introducción a El pastor renovado, J I Packer, con una serie de datos cronológicos/biográficos “en el estilo de Who’s Who (Quién es quién)”, presenta “a Richard Baxter, el pastor, evangelista y escritor más destacado en cuanto a asuntos prácticos y devocionales producido por el puritanismo.” (Escribió dos veces más que John Owen, según LF.)

    Packer continúa: “Baxter era un gran hombre, lo suficientemente grande para tener grandes defectos y cometer grandes errores. Brillante diputado independiente, extremadamente culto, con una asombrosa capacidad para el análisis instantáneo, el debate y la argumentación, era capaz de darle mil vueltas a cualquiera en un debate, pero no siempre empleaba sus destacados dones de la mejor manera posible.” Y Packer da unos ejemplos de cómo buscó un camino intermedio entre varias teologías sobre varias doctrinas (por ejemplo, entre la reformada y arriana y romana en cuanto a la gracia).

    De hecho, la palabra “baxterianismo” fue inventada y se usa todavía (en inglés) de una manera despectiva en referencia a las enseñanzas de ese hombre, como pueden verificar por una búsqueda en el internet. Hay artículos modernos escritos por algunos de nuestros hermanos bautistas reformados que señalan esos errores en la teología de Baxter (por ejemplo, Austin Walker, y otros).3

    Packer también afirma que Baxter no supo “desenvolverse bien en la vida pública.” Añade, “Aunque siempre fue respetado por su vida piadosa y su destreza pastoral, y porque siempre buscaba la paz doctrinal y eclesiástica, su proceder combativo, tajante y pedagógico ante sus semejantes aseguraba de antemano el fracaso.”

    También Meeting the Puritans (Conociendo a los puritanos) dice (en mi traducción “dinámica”), “Los escritos de Baxter son una mezcla teológica extraña. Fue de los pocos puritanos cuyas doctrinas de los decretos de Dios, de la expiación y de la justificación fueron cualquier cosa menos reformadas. Aunque en general su teología fue estructurada siguiendo el pensamiento reformado, frecuentemente favoreció el pensamiento arminiano. Desarrolló su propia idea de la redención universal, la cual ofendió a los calvinistas, pero también retuvo una forma de elección personal, la cual ofendió a los arminianos. Rechazó la reprobación. Fue influenciado grandemente por los seguidores de Moisés Amyraut e incorporó en su teología mucho del pensamiento de Amyraut, incluyendo un universalismo hipotético, que enseña que Cristo murió por todos los hombres en teoría, pero que su muerte solamente tiene un beneficio verdadero a los que creen. Baxter creía que la muerte de Cristo fue más bien una satisfacción a la ley que una muerte sustitutiva personal por los pecadores escogidos.”

    Los autores de este mismo libro continúan, “La manera en la cual Baxter entendió la justificación ha sido llamada ‘neonomismo’ (en inglés “neonomianism”o sea, ‘nueva ley’); dijo que Dios ha hecho una nueva ley ofreciendo perdón a los arrepentidos transgresores de la ley antigua. La fe y el arrepentimiento – la nueva ley que tiene que ser obedecida – llegan a ser la justicia personal y salvadora del creyente, justicia salvadora que es sostenida por gracia que la preserva. Así que, la soteriología de Baxter sigue a Amyraut con la adición de la enseñanza arminiana de una ‘nueva ley’. Afortunadamente, estas doctrinas erróneas no aparecen mucho en los escritos devocionales de Baxter, que tienen como su fin el animar la santificación antes de enseñar la teología”.4

    Hay que fijarse bien en esa última oración, y en lo que dice Packer, después de exponer la parte negativa de la vida de Baxter, “Sin embargo, como pastor, Baxter era incomparable”.

    Es esa “faceta de su ser” la que explica nuestro interés en Baxter. Podemos aprender mucho de él.

    Padres y educación elemental

    El Richard Baxter quien ministró en Kidderminster en Inglaterra y escribió muchos libros conocidos como El reposo eterno de los santos (The Saints’ Everlasting Rest) y El pastor reformado (The Reformed Pastor) y El directorio cristiano (The Christian Directory, un libro no traducido al español), nació el 12 de noviembre de 1615 (la fecha comúnmente aceptada), en un pueblo de Shropshire llamado Rowton, el único hijo de sus padres Beatrice Adeney y Richard Baxter.

    Su padre tuvo la mala costumbre de jugar, además de haber heredado unas deudas, y su madre tenía mala salud. Por eso, Baxter hijo, el sujeto de este estudio, vivió con sus abuelos maternos por los primeros 10 años de su vida. Después de la conversión de su padre mediante la lectura de las Escrituras a solas, Baxter volvió a la casa de sus padres y luego en su vida se dio cuenta de cómo Dios usó las conversaciones serias acerca de Dios y de la eternidad como el medio de sus primeras convicciones, y de ver con aprobación la necesidad de una vida santa.

    Notemos bien la gran bondad de Dios en la salvación de su padre y cómo Dios usó eso para bien en la vida del hijo.

    En esas circunstancias, la educación de Baxter fue bastante informal. Dijo que tuvo 4 maestros diferentes en 6 años, y los 4 eran ignorantes, (¿en un sentido espiritual? ndv) y 2 de ellos llevaron vidas inmorales. No obstante, tuvo una mente fértil, y leyó y estudió con deleite.

    No obtuvo grados universitarios pero casi todos están de acuerdo que sabía más de la Biblia y de los escritos de otros que la mayoría de los que tuvieron el privilegio de estudiar en la universidad.

    Conversión, otros estudios

    Un tiempo extendido de enfermedad y la lectura de varios libros, especialmente las obras de William Perkins, fueron los medios que Dios usó para que Baxter resolviera que sería de Dios (como testificó: God “resolved me for Himself”).

    Cuando cumplió 15 años de edad, fue tocado y conmovido profundamente por el libro The Bruised Reed (La caña cascada) de Richard Sibbes. Escribió: “Sibbes me abrió más del amor de Dios y me dio una comprensión viva del misterio de la redención y de cuán grande era mi deuda a Jesucristo.”

    Después de eso, confesó que el libro Treatise of Faith (Tratado de la fe) por Ezekiel Culverwell le hizo mucho bien.

    La educación de Baxter mejoró cuando pudo estudiar en una escuela de gramática en Wroxeter con la ayuda de un maestro llamado John Owen (pero no el conocido puritano). Allí había un ministro erudito, Francis Garbet, que le ayudó en mucho.

    A la edad de 16, persuadido por Owen, en vez de ir a la universidad, recibió instrucción de un amigo de Owen, Richard Wickstead, capellán en Ludlow Castle (Castillo de Ludlow). Estuvo allí por 18 meses, pero parece que su tutor no tuvo mucho entusiasmo en la tutoría.

    Después de eso, en 1633, fue a Londres, patrocinado por Sir Henry Herbert quien era “Master of the Revels”) (director de entretenimiento) en la corte del rey Carlos I. Durante su poco tiempo en esa ciudad, oyó a 2 ministros puritanos, Charles I. Joseph Symonds y Walter Craddock, ministros piadosos que despertaron en él unas simpatías hacia los no conformistas. Pero, sólo se quedó en Londres por 4 semanas. No le gustó la vida mundana de la corte y también quiso cuidar a su madre enferma.

    Volvió a su casa en el 1634 y su madre murió en mayo de 1635.

    Por los próximos 4 años, estudió por su cuenta. Estudió teología. En particular estudió la teología de los escolásticos, incluyendo Tomás de Aquino, Duns Scotus y Guillermo de Ockham.

    Llamamiento al ministerio, y ministerio en Kidderminster

    A la edad de 23 años, Baxter fue ordenado como diácono en la iglesia oficial, pensando que los “conformistas” (los que favorecieron que todos fueran parte de la Iglesia de Iglaterra, la Iglesia Anglicana) tuvieron mejores argumentos que los no conformistas. Por 9 meses sirvió como maestro de una escuela fundada en Dudley, un centro de “no conformismo”. En 1639 comenzó a servir como asistente del ministro en el pueblo de Bridgnorth, Shropshire. Allí, pudo apreciar más el “no conformismo” que había en el país.

    En 1641 Baxter fue establecido como coadjutor de Kidderminster, Worchestershire. La población contenía muchos tejedores groseros y corruptos. Al principio muchos fueron ofendidos por su predicación fuerte y por su énfasis en una Santa Cena controlada y en la disciplina de la iglesia. Sin embargo, durante los 17 años que sirvió allí (1641-42 y 1647-61) vio mucho fruto. Predicó como “un hombre moribundo a hombres moribundos”. Por la bendición del Espíritu Santo hubo muchas conversiones. Su orar también fue intenso, como una persona testificó, “Su alma tomó alas hacia el cielo y arrebató las almas de otros con él”.

    Interrupción a causa de la guerra civil.

    Durante el tiempo cuando los ejércitos del parlamento (bajo Oliver Cromwell) pelearon contra los ejércitos del rey, Baxter apoyó y, a veces, acompañó los ejércitos del parlamento. Predicó delante de Cromwell, pero no estaba de acuerdo con la tolerancia de Cromwell hacia los separatistas (los que habían dejado la iglesia de Inglaterra para formar iglesias separadas, como los presbiterianos, congregacionalistas, bautistas y otros). Aunque Baxter no se conformaba a la Iglesia Anglicana en varias cosas, con todo quiso ser parte de una iglesia establecida sin separación. Vio como algunos líderes separatistas enseñaron el antinomismo, el cual se opone a una vida cristiana práctica.

    En el 1647, debido a las enfermedades prolongadas, Baxter tuvo que dejar el ejército. Recuperó en el hogar del señor Thomas Rous y su señora. Allí preparó la primera parte de su famoso libro The Saints Everlasting Rest (El reposo eterno de los santos), que fue publicado por primera vez en 1650. Más tarde en su vida declaró que lo escribió como una labor de amor mientras que “miraba a la muerte cara a cara, y con todo, experimentando la gracia suficiente de Dios.”

    Ministerio continuado en Kidderminster.

    Después de su recuperación, Baxter volvió a Kidderminster y allí se concentró en escribir. “Mis escritos fueron mi ocupación principal diariamente…mientras que la predicación y la preparación para predicar fueron mi recreación” (Reliquiae, MP). Catequizó a los miembros de la iglesia 2 días de cada semana. Iba de casa en casa con un asistente, hablando con cada familia por una hora y proveyendo a cada familia un libro edificante o dos, usualmente libros escritos por él. Dijo de esas visitas: “Pocas familias me despidieron sin algunas lágrimas, o sin lo que parecieron ser unas promesas serias de seguir una vida santa.” También añadió, “Algunas personas ignorantes, que por mucho tiempo no sacaron provecho de la palabra que oyeron, han obtenido más conocimiento y remordimiento de consciencia en media hora de visita intensa, que el que obtuvieron en 10 años de la predicación pública.”

    Cito ahora a Packer, “La ciudad abarcaba unos 800 hogares y 2000 personas. Cuando Baxter llegó era ‘un pueblo ignorante, rudo y parrandero’, pero ese estado sufrió una dramática transformación. ‘Cuando emprendí la labor, tomé nota especial de todo aquel que se humilló, se reformó o se convirtió; pero cuando llevaba mucho tiempo trabajando, por la gracia de Dios se convirtieron tantos que ya no tenía tiempo para anotarlos a todos […] familias enteras y un número considerable de personas […] se convirtieron y crecieron en la fe, de manera casi inexplicable.” “La congregación solía estar completa [la iglesia tenía capacidad para 1000 personas], de manera que nos vimos obligados a construir cinco galerías […]. Los domingos […] se podía escuchar a cien familias cantando salmos y repitiendo sermones al pasar por las calles […]; cuando llegué aquí había más o menos una familia por calle que adoraba a Dios y clamaba a su nombre y, cuando me marché, en algunas calles no quedaba ni una sola familia que no lo hiciera; todos, al profesar una piedad seria, nos hacían confiar en su sinceridad”. (Sigue leyendo el resto del párrafo en la página 16).

    El tiempo cuando fue expulsado del ministerio

    Baxter estaba dispuesto a conformarse en mucho, pero no pudo aceptar todo lo que el rey y los líderes anglicanos exigieron y por eso, como 2000 ministros más, fue expulsado de su iglesia en el día de San Bartolomé (24 agosto) de 1662. Baxter iba rumbo a su cumpleaños 47 cuando eso pasó.

    Cuando cumplió 50 años se casó con Margaret Charlton, una mujer que fue convertida mediante su predicación en años anteriores. Ella tenía menos de la mitad de los años de Baxter, y unos cuantos se preocuparon por eso. Sin embargo, la excelencia de su matrimonio silenció los comentarios. Ella tenía la reputación de ser una cristiana devota y una esposa fiel que anhelaba la salvación de las almas. Baxter escribió de ella, hablando de su piedad. Dijo que ella pudo resolver problemas de consciencia mejor que la mayoría de los pastores que conoció. Por eso compartió muchos casos con ella, excepto aquellos más confidenciales.

    Fue encarcelado más de una vez. En su vejez, el rey James II le persiguió y fue encarcelado por unos meses.

    Además de los sufrimientos por causa de la consciencia, Baxter también sufrió mucho en su salud. Según algunos, Baxter sufría de tuberculosis, pero, si fuera así, aparentemente esa enfermedad no llegó a su colmo porque vivió hasta los 76 años de edad. Desde los 21 años tenía mucho dolor, pero siempre trabajaba ardientemente según las circunstancias le permitieron.

    En el tiempo de no poder ser pastor, buscó las maneras posibles de ser útil, especialmente usando su pluma.

    Ministerio literario

    Publicó como 135 escritos durante su vida; hay como 6 póstumos y muchos tratados no publicados (JP)

    Entre los más conocidos: El reposo eternos de los santos (The Saints Everlasting Rest,1650), publicado en español por CLIE (hay copias disponibles todavía a buenos precios); El pastor renovado (The Reformed Pastor, 1656), publicado en español por Estandarte de la Verdad en 2009 (no hay copias disponibles de Estandarte y parece que son escasas porque alguien, via Amazón, el 3 de mayo de 2016, estaba tratando de vender una copia por $140); A Call to the Unconverted (Un llamamiento a los inconversos) (1658); A Christian Directory (Directrices cristianas) (1673). Estos últimos dos están disponibles todavía en inglés en libros o como libros electrónicos.

    Muchas partes de los directrices han sido publicados como tratados. Por ejemplo (en inglés): Directions for amusements and recreations; http://www.gracegems.org/28/directions_for_amusements.htm

    Hay un buen tratado en español llamado: Cómo pasar el día con Dios

    CÓMO PASAR EL DÍA CON DIOS, Richard Baxter

    Hay otro llamado: Orientaciones para odiar el pecado Fuente: http://www.puritansermons.com/baxter/baxter16.html
    http://descubriendoelevangelio.es/2009/04/orientaciones-para-odiar-el-pecado-richard-baxter/

    Lo siguiente5 aparece en “Diarios de avivamientos” (WordPress.com) sin el nombre del autor. Encuentro las citas edificantes:

    Extracto de la introducción escrita por el Dr. J.I. Packer

    Richard Baxter fue el pastor y evangelista más destacado de la época puritana. Sus logros en el poblado de Kidderminster fueron asombrosos. Inglaterra no había visto ningún ministerio parecido antes. El poblado tenía como 2000 habitantes y la mayoría eran ignorantes, groseros y viciosos. Pero después de la llegada de Baxter, la situación cambió en forma dramática. El dijo: “Le agradó a Dios convertir a muchos… Incluso a familias enteras y en numerosos grupos entraron a la iglesia”. Un siglo después, cuando George Whitefield visitó Kidderminster, escribió a un amigo lo siguiente: “Fui grandemente animado al descubrir que un olor suave de la doctrina, las obras y la disciplina del Señor Baxter, permanecían todavía en ese lugar”.

    El libro del Pastor Reformado fue y todavía es, dinamita; y como tal hizo un impacto de inmediato. Muchísimos ministros puritanos (entre ellos presbiterianos, independientes y bautistas) leyeron este libro y lo llevaron a la práctica. El libro hizo un gran impacto sobre muchos ministros en la época del “avivamiento grande” (1742-1743).

    Muchos ministros lo han leído como un estímulo que les ha impulsado a entregarse más a la obra de Dios. C. H. Spurgeon comentaba que tenía la costumbre de escuchar la lectura de este libro (a través de su esposa) los domingos por la tarde.

    Extractos del libro El Pastor Reformado, publicado originalmente en 1656

    Nuestro ministerio debe estar centrado en las grandes enseñanzas de la Escritura. Esto es lo que la gente necesita para alimentar sus almas, para mortificar sus pecados y calentar sus corazones. Si solo predicamos a Cristo, estaremos predicando todo. Esta es la mejor forma para no perder el tiempo. Muchas otras cosas pudieran ser deseables, pero el tiempo es corto y las almas son preciosas. Si los oyentes fallan en comprender las verdades esenciales del evangelio, entonces serán perdidos para siempre. Esto no agradará a aquellos que siempre quieren escuchar algo nuevo y emocionante. Frecuentemente tendremos que repetir las mismas cosas, porque las verdades esenciales son relativamente pocas. Sin embargo, debemos tratar de usar mucha variedad en su presentación. Tenga cuidado de no imitar a aquellos que tratan de compensar su falta de espiritualidad, convirtiendo su predicación en un “show” para divertir a los oyentes.

    Nuestra enseñanza debería ser lo más clara y sencilla posible. La gente no puede beneficiarse de nuestro ministerio a menos que lo puedan entender. Si obscurecemos la verdad, entonces somos enemigos de ella.

    Debemos cumplir nuestros deberes con gran humildad. Recuerde que la palabra “ministro” significa uno que sirve. El orgullo está fuera de lugar en uno que está buscando ayudar a otros en el camino de la salvación. Si Dios expulsó a un ángel orgulloso del cielo, entonces ¿Acaso dará la bienvenida a un predicador orgulloso y soberbio? El orgullo genera la envidia y los pleitos, y obstaculiza grandemente la obra del evangelio. Algunos pastores se han vuelto incompetentes porque son demasiado soberbios para aprender. No debemos rechazar con arrogancia a aquellos que no están de acuerdo con nosotros. Siempre debemos estar dispuestos a aprender de otros.

    Si nuestro pueblo está convencido de que les amamos, entonces serán más receptivos a nuestra enseñanza. Por lo tanto, debemos mostrar nuestro amor en una forma práctica. Pero, hay que tener cuidado de que nuestro amor no sea egoísta. Ellos deben seguir a Cristo y no a nosotros. No pase por alto sus pecados. La reprensión no es inconsistente con el amor. Dios mismo “disciplina a aquellos que ama”. Si usted quiere ser su mejor amigo, ayúdeles a pelear en contra de sus peores enemigos.

    Debemos tener reverencia en toda nuestra obra . La reverencia proviene del conocimiento de Dios. Por lo tanto, la irreverencia en las cosas santas es un signo de hipocresía. Alguien que predica como si estuviera viendo el rostro de Dios, tendrá un efecto más profundo que un hombre irreverente, aunque éste predique más ferviente y elocuentemente.

    Yo detesto la predicación que busca ser entretenida y alegre. No fuimos enviados para entretener, sino para impresionar a los pecadores con la majestad de nuestro Dios santo. Entre más se manifieste la presencia de Dios en nuestro ministerio, más profundamente será nuestra influencia sobre la gente.

    El predicador más dotado no debe gloriarse en nada excepto en la cruz de Cristo. Es un signo seguro de decadencia espiritual cuando perdemos nuestro gusto por la Palabra de Dios.

    Debemos estar profundamente conscientes de nuestra insuficiencia y de nuestra completa dependencia de Cristo. Debemos rogar continuamente a Dios por la gracia y la fuerza necesarias para cumplir nuestra gran tarea. No podemos predicar fervientemente a nuestro pueblo a menos que oremos fervientemente por ellos. Solo Dios les puede dar el arrepentimiento y la fe para vida eterna.

    Mientras que miramos al pueblo de Dios congregado, debemos recordar que han sido comprados por la sangre de Cristo. Escuche la voz de la sangre (Hebreos 12:24) rogándole para que sea fiel en toda su obra.

    Uno de nuestros peores pecados es el orgullo. El orgullo aflige aún a los mejores de nosotros. Afecta nuestra manera de hablar, nuestras compañías y aún nuestra apariencia (la manera como nos vestimos). El orgullo llena la mente con ambición y resentimientos hacia cualquiera que nos estorbe. El orgullo siempre está insinuándose a todos nuestros pensamientos y deseos. Nos persigue aún en nuestros estudios.

    Dios quiere que nuestros mensajes sean claros y sencillos para que todos los puedan entender, pero el orgullo nos motiva a ser astutos y divertidos. El orgullo quita el filo de nuestros sermones, porque excluye cualquier cosa que parece sencilla o poco sofisticada. El orgullo nos hace tratar de impresionar a la gente en lugar de edificarla. Dios quiere que prediquemos fervientemente, rogando a los pecadores para que se arrepientan; pero el orgullo nos dice que no debemos ser tan fervientes, para que la gente no vaya a pensar que estamos locos. En esta manera el orgullo gana el control sobre nuestro ministerio. La verdad puede ser predicada pero en una forma que sirve a los intereses de Satanás más que a los de Dios.

    Después de que el orgullo ha influido en nuestra preparación, entonces nos perseguirá hasta el púlpito. El orgullo afecta nuestra manera de predicar e impide que digamos cosas ofensivas, aún y cuando sean necesarias. El orgullo nos hace agradar a nuestra audiencia, buscando nuestra propia gloria en lugar de la gloria de Dios. El orgullo tiene la meta de impresionar a la gente con nuestra elocuencia, nuestro conocimiento, sentido del humor, piedad, etc..

    Después del sermón el orgullo nos persigue cuando salimos del púlpito, para saber lo que los oyentes piensan de la predicación. Si les agradó, entonces nos regocijamos, pero si no les impresionó, entonces nos desanimamos. Casi no nos preocupamos si tuvo un efecto salvador en algunos oyentes o no.

    Algunos ministros están tan ansiosos por ser populares que envidian a sus hermanos más famosos. Parecen pensar que los dones que Dios les ha dado son para atraer la admiración de la gente. Si otros tienen mayores dones que ellos, entonces dicen que se les está “sobrestimando”. ¿Acaso nos hemos olvidado que Cristo nos da dones para beneficiar a toda la iglesia? Si los dones de nuestros hermanos glorifican a Dios y benefician a su pueblo, ¿No deberíamos dar las gracias a Dios?

    No obstante, cuán frecuentemente encontramos a los ministros manchando secretamente la reputación de los hermanos más dotados. Cuando no pueden encontrar muchos motivos para criticarlos, entonces se rebajan al nivel de levantar malas sospechas, rumores maliciosos e insinuaciones. Otros, quienes temen perder su popularidad, no permiten que los mejores predicadores ocupen sus púlpitos. Esta actitud es tan común que es raro encontrar a dos predicadores igualmente dotados, trabajando en armonía en la misma iglesia. Su amistad es frecuentemente enfriada por la envidia y la rivalidad. Algunos ministros son tan celosos para mantener su posición que tratan de hacer todo ellos mismos, en lugar de ocupar a un asistente. Esto resulta en que el ministerio sea desacreditado y en el descuido pastoral del pueblo de Dios.

    Algunos ministros piensan que siempre tienen la razón, aún en los detalles más pequeños, y critican a cualquiera que se atreve a estar en desacuerdo con ellos. Ellos rechazan la doctrina de la infalibilidad papal, pero parece como si ellos aspirasen a ser pequeños papas. Esperan que todos estén de acuerdo con ellos como si fueran infalibles.5

    Rasgos importantes

    Su reputación como un hombre santo

    Varios hombres de Dios han hablado de Baxter como un hombre santo, como lo hizo Joseph Alleine quien escribió el libro famoso Alarm to the Unconverted, disponible en varios formatos (en inglés).

    Muchos hombres conocidos han pasado por alto las ideas no reformadas de Baxter, alabándole por sus escritos prácticos.

    Muchos testifican de la ayuda que han recibido de los libros mencionados arriba.

    El uso de su tiempo

    Considerando la salud de Baxter, es maravilloso observar el uso que hizo de su tiempo, incluyendo la oración, el estudio de las Escrituras, las predicaciones, las visitas pastorales.

    Evangelización y cuidado pastoral

    Muchas personas se convirtieron por su predicación y sus libros. Algunos de aquellos llegaron a ser ministros del evangelio.

    Muchos santos han testificado de cuánta ayuda recibieron mediante diferentes libros del Baxter (como el 2do suegro de Matthew Henry).

    Baxter fue un buen pastor y evangelista durante su vida terrenal y no sólo en persona, sino por medio de sus escritos. Todavía tiene una influencia santa entre cristianos de habla inglés y de habla español y portugués y ¿¿?? mediante sus libros.

    Notas.

    1. La parte sobre Richard Baxter (en inglés) se encuentra también en: https://www.monergism.com/thethreshold/articles/onsite/meetthepuritans/richardbaxter.html
    2. Se puede ver en: http://thirdmill.org/newfiles/lyn_friesen/CH.Friesen.Baxter.2.pdf
    3. Austin Walker: https://reformedforhisglory.wordpress.com/2013/04/20/benjamin-keach-contra-richard-baxter-justification-contra-baxterianism/ ;
    B A Ramsbottom , https://testallthings.com/2008/09/04/ramsbottom-baxterianism-a-warning/ ;
    Jeff Massey, http://confessingbaptist.com/tag/baxterianism/
    4. Ese error procede de un entendimiento equivocado de Génesis 15:6 citado por Pablo en la Epístola a los Romanos. Ustedes pueden estudiar ese versículo en buenos comentarios sobre Romanos (como los de Haldane, Hodge, Murray).
    El pastor Alan Dunn tiene una copia de un buen artículo (en inglés) sobre el significado de Génesis 15:6 en los escritos de Pablo, HOW DID PAUL UNDERSTAND THE SYNTAX OF GENESIS 15:6? Robert Duncan Culver (1916-2015). No pude hallar el artículo en sí con Google, pero hay disponible (por $4) una grabación en MP3 sobre ese tema por el autor: http://www.wordmp3.com/details.aspx?id=19800)
    5. https://diariosdeavivamientos.wordpress.com/2014/04/19/richard-baxter-el-pastor-reformado/

    Línea de tiempo (véase Introducción de J I Packer, El pastor renovado)

    1615 Nació, 12 de noviembre, (¿fecha?) en Rowton, Shropshire
    1638 Ordenado diácono
    1639 Rector del Colegio Richard Foley en Dudley
    1639-40 Coadjutor (ayudante) en la iglesia de Bridgnorth
    1641-42 Profesor (coadjutor) en la iglesia de Kidderminster
    1642-45 Capellán en Coventry
    1645-47 Capellán con regimiento en Whalley
    1647-61 Pastor en Kidderminster
    1661 Participó en la conferencia de Saboya
    1662-91 Tiempo de persecución. Se casó en 1662.
    1662-63 Moorfields
    1663-69 Acton
    1669 Encarcelado por una semana en Clerkenwell
    1669-73 Totteridge
    1673-85 Bloomsbury
    1685-86 Encarcelado por 21 meses en Southwark,
    1686-91 Finsbury
    1691 Murió, 8 de diciembre, en Londres.

    © Copyright | Derechos Reservados

  • 2016 Pastors’ Conference | Men of Conviction II

    [two_third last=»yes» spacing=»yes» center_content=»no» hide_on_mobile=»no» background_color=»» background_image=»» background_repeat=»no-repeat» background_position=»left top» hover_type=»none» link=»» border_position=»all» border_size=»0px» border_color=»» border_style=»» padding=»» margin_top=»» margin_bottom=»» animation_type=»» animation_direction=»» animation_speed=»0.1″ animation_offset=»» class=»» id=»»][fusion_text]Men of Conviction II[/fusion_text][separator style_type=»none» top_margin=»» bottom_margin=»» sep_color=»» border_size=»» icon=»» icon_circle=»» icon_circle_color=»» width=»» alignment=»» class=»» id=»»][accordian divider_line=»» class=»» id=»»][toggle title=»Video» open=»no»][/toggle][toggle title=»Audio» open=»no»]

    [dlaudio link=»https://www.conferenciapastoral.org/wp-content/uploads/Sermones/2016-05-02-Men-of-Conviction-II-Jeff-Smith.mp3″]Download Audio[/dlaudio][/toggle][toggle title=»Text in English» open=»no»]Let’s begin by praying and asking for God’s blessing.

    Lord, we pray that You would give Your Spirit to us this afternoon, especially as we have enjoyed a very good and delicious meal, and we can indeed be sleepy at this time of the day. Help us to not be sleepy, but help us to pay attention to Your Word and to learn from your Word, and to go forth from this conference implementing what we have learned from Your Word in all of the sessions. So, we pray and ask for grace, for Your mercy, for Your presence by Your Spirit with the Word of God. In Jesus’ name we pray. Amen.

    This is my second message in the conference on the need for men of biblical convictions. We briefly considered what is involved in being a man of biblical convictions, as well as some examples from the Scriptures of men of biblical convictions. I would like to propose, this afternoon, three specific areas where I think we need to be men of biblical conviction. Three specific areas. I’m just going to jump right into those specific areas. The first area where I believe we need to be men of biblical conviction concerns a conviction in the complete authority and sufficiency of the Word of God, the Bible.

    1. A conviction concerning the complete authority and sufficiency of the Word of God, the Bible.

    We no longer have prophets in the world. I realize there are charismatics who would disagree with that, but I don’t think anyone here would disagree with my statement. I do believe biblically, truthfully, there are no prophets anywhere in the world. There’s no need for prophets. We no longer have the Lord Jesus Christ living here on earth. We no longer have apostles in the world. Again, there are those in Pentecostal circles, Charismatic circles who may say, “I’m an apostle,” but you understand what I mean. We no longer have apostles in the biblical sense in the world, and we don’t need them.

    We no longer have, nor will we be given by God, nor do we need a new mouthpiece of special revelation. We do not need continuing special revelation, for we have the completed, inscripturated Word of the Living God.

    Indeed, as we’re instructed in 2 Timothy 3:16-17—you don’t need to turn there, you’re familiar with that passage—we read:

    “All Scripture is breathed-out by God, and is profitable for teaching, for reproof, for correction, and for training in righteousness; that the man of God may be competent, equipped for every good work.”

    So, I’m sure you all probably know that that word there in 2 Timothy 3 that is translated the way I just read it “breathed out by God” is this Greek term that does literally mean that Scripture is the product of the created breath of God. As I’m breathing out words now, this is what God did giving us the Scriptures. It is the Word of the Living God.

    This passage in 2 Timothy also teaches us that the Word of God is totally sufficient so that the man of God may be equipped for some good work? No. For every good work. For every good work it is sufficient. The Lord Jesus made this plain when He was here on earth: that the Scriptures were always, for Him, the final court of appeal in every situation in life, in every controversy, in every situation of instruction at all times. That’s why we read again and again and again words such as these. You don’t need to turn there; I will just quote these passages.

    Matthew 12:3, “But Jesus said unto them, ‘Have you not read what David did, when he was hungry, and they that were with him’?”

    Matthew 12:5, “Or have you not read in the law, that on the sabbath day the priests in the temple profane the sabbath and are guiltless?”

    Matthew 19:4, “And He [Jesus] answered and said, ‘Have you not read that He who made them from the beginning made them male and female?’”

    Matthew 22:31, Jesus speaking, “But as touching the resurrection of the dead, have you not read that which was spoken unto you by God, saying..”

    Mark 12:10, “Have you not read even this Scripture, ‘The stone which the builders rejected, the same was made as the head of the corner’?”

    Those are just some passages that show us that the Lord Jesus Christ regarded the Word of God as adequate, as sufficient, as authoritative for every controversy, every situation in life.

    Many of the Jews of Jesus’ day were condemned by those questions of the Lord Jesus, because they had read the Scriptures and yet they hadn’t understood the Scriptures. Probably many of them could quote from memory Scriptures Jesus cited, but you see they didn’t take what they had read and really read it, that is, really imbibed it, believed it.

    Well, what about you? What about me today? Are we like the Jews of Jesus’ day? I hope we’re not like the Jews of Jesus’ day. I hope we’re different. I hope we’re like the Lord Jesus Christ regarding the Scriptures. The Lord Jesus Christ, for Him, the Scriptures infallibly reveal God to us. For the Lord Jesus Christ the Scriptures instruct us how God created the world, how God created man. The Scriptures, according to the Lord, show us everything we need to understand about God’s gracious method of salvation from sin.

    The Lord said the Scripture could not be broken. The Scriptures had to be completely and perfectly fulfilled. The Scriptures explained all spiritual realities which we need to understand. The Scriptures settle all controversies. The Scriptures teach us what we should do in church, and what we should not do in church. The Scriptures teach us how we are to worship God. They teach us what we must preach, what we must teach. The Scriptures, you see, are our final, authoritative, all-sufficient Word from the Living God, and we need to be men, pastors, who really believe that and put that into practice.

    Do you wholeheartedly believe and embrace these perspectives and convictions regarding the Scriptures, as did the Lord Jesus Christ and His apostles? Or have you, to some degree—and I’m asking you to be honest with yourself—have you to some degree in your heart or in your church practice begun to relinquish these foundational, biblical convictions regarding the Scriptures?

    I personally believe—I could be totally wrong, you could prove me wrong, perhaps—but I personally believe this is the reason why many professing Christians in our day, at least in America, have turned to other means and methods to “draw in visitors” to the church on the Lord’s Day. They either never had a conviction about the authority and finality and sufficiency of Scripture, or if they did they have started to relinquish it. They have lost that conviction that the Scriptures instruct us regarding how we are to think and live in every sphere of life, including church life.

    You might sit here and you might indeed say, “I hold to the 1689 London Baptist Confession of Faith.” Well, if you say that that’s good, but the final authority is not the Confession. It’s the Bible. The Confession is under the Bible, but the Confession is very helpful. That Confession states this: “The Holy Scripture is the only sufficient, certain, and infallible rule of all saving knowledge, faith, and obedience.”

    Again I ask you: have you, sitting here today in heart and practice, have you begun to decline subtly or not-so-subtly from your confidence in the Bible as the only sufficient rule of all saving knowledge, faith, and obedience? It can be tempting to do that.

    Perhaps you, as the pastor, or members in your church, they look around in the church, on the Lord’s Day, and they see empty pews or empty chairs. We have empty pews at Trinity Baptist Church. We pray frequently that God will fill them with sinners and saints, but we’re not going to, by God’s grace, change our convictions, change our message, change our methods in order to “draw in people and fill the pews.” We’re not going to do something that is unbiblical.

    So I’m asking you: what are you doing? When you look around and you see empty chairs, empty pews, are you being tempted to relinquish what is biblical in your church life and practice?

    Perhaps there are people in the church who have children. The children grow up, they off to university, they’re not converted, and they make it clear they have no interest in coming back to the church. Or they go off to university and they get a taste of other Christianity, and now they don’t want your stiff, formal, Reformed Baptist religion. They like this easy, breezy—that’s what I call it—easy, breezy Christianity. You might be tempted to say, “Well, maybe there’s something wrong with us.”

    Or members of the church have invited friends to come to the church, and when they come it’s very clear after the service is over that they have no intention of ever setting foot in your church again.

    Well, these are real discouragements. I assure you, I find it very discouraging to see empty pews in our church. I don’t deny that, but it is at such crucial times of discouragement that you, as a pastor, and the members of your church, need to be on your guard, because that’s when you are vulnerable to temptation, to become restive, and to think that something’s wrong with your ministry, something’s wrong with your church.

    Now, possibly, something could be wrong, and Pastor Piñero said in the previous message, if I heard him correctly: we need to always be reforming. We need to be willing to step back and analyze our church ministry, our pastoral ministry, our preaching, our lives in the light of the Bible. We need to do that. There could be something wrong. Maybe there is something unbiblical, and we haven’t yet seen it. So, it’s not wrong to reassess your life and ministry, your church life in the light of the Bible. But sometimes people desire and ask for change just because they begin to believe that there’s something faulty in the message that you’re preaching, or they think there’s something faulty with you, the messenger, or they think there’s something faulty with the method of delivering the message.

    If they’re genuine Christians they would never say that they believe there’s something defective with the gospel. A genuine Christian won’t say that! Yet, there is this subtle unbelief in the sufficiency of the gospel and the sufficiency of the Word of God, the Scriptures. So, such people may pressure you. “Well, we need to introduce something new. We need some new ways to make the church more appealing, more inviting.” We shouldn’t be trying to be uninviting by our faces, our demeanor, our behaviour, our words. We should, as pastors and as a people, we should seek to be inviting, but we should not compromise the Word of God. We should not introduce methods or things that are not biblically validated. It’s easy by degrees, or radically even, for churches to say, “Well, let’s just add more music.”

    Again, I thought it was interesting listening to Pastor Piñero in the previous message, because we didn’t consult with each other. My son who is a Christian, who lives in a different state in America, doesn’t live anywhere near New Jersey, I’ve been to one of his churches that he has attended in the past where he has lived, and I have said to him, “Joshua, the church service is one hour long. There was probably about forty minutes of music! Forty minutes of music, and it wasn’t good music. It wasn’t rock music, but it was one hymn after another and I said, “Josh, they don’t even have theological content. They really don’t have much content at all, biblically.” The music was ok, but really it was more like a concert. My son ended up leaving that church, thankfully. My point it that I’m sure there were true Christians there, but I don’t believe from the Bible that that’s what our country needs. I don’t believe from the Bible that that’s what is really going to win pagans to Christ. It’s what we see in the Bible.

    Again, I’m not saying we should be traditionalists. “Well, we did it that way ten years ago. We’re going to still do it that way today, and we’re going to do it that way for the next fifty years.” You have to look at the Bible. What does the Bible say? We don’t need multimedia presentations. We don’t need drama. That’s not substantiated in the Word of God. We don’t need bands with light shows. We don’t need ever increasing specialized interest groups that cater to the felt need of this small group of people and that small group of people and that small group of people. We shouldn’t relinquish biblical terms!

    My fellow elders, pastors at Trinity Baptist Church, they like to tease me. They say, “Well, let’s ask Coach Jeff what he thinks about what we should do in church.” They’re teasing, you know, because they’re not even called pastors. They’re called “coaches,” “team leaders.” You don’t worship in a church, you worship in a campus, or you worship in a worship center. Why do they not like these terms? In such instances, again, I strongly suspect that the root problem in this: there is an erosion or a loss of confidence in the authority and the sufficiency of the Scriptures for all life.

    More to the point, such people reveal by their thinking, by their actions, that they have actually lost, to some degree, confidence in the gospel itself as the power of God unto salvation to everyone who believes, whether Jew or Greek. Again, I am not saying we should stick to our traditions just because they are traditions. We should reevaluate what we do in the light of the Word of God. We should ask questions like this when we are looking at our lives, when we are looking at our churches, “What do the Scriptures teach about that subject or that activity?” What is biblical in this perspective or in that teaching or that practice? Let’s not lose confidence in the proclamation of a crucified Saviour! Let’s not fear men! Let’s not fear teenagers! Let’s not fear young adults! Let’s not be obnoxious, but let’s not change just to change. We shouldn’t be changing things because we just want to be novel, we want to be fresh, we want to be relevant.

    Again, I’m not saying we shouldn’t evaluate these things in the light of the Bible, but we don’t need a new gospel. We have the gospel of the Word of God. That’s what we need to proclaim. The people of our countries and cultures need to hear not the latest evangelical fad, not the latest pronouncement by an evangelical expert, not what the evangelical celebrities are saying. Again, I didn’t consult with Pastor Piñero.

    You read the Corinthian letters—I just find it amazing how Americans are so caught up with wanting celebrities. It shouldn’t surprise me. We have sports celebrities, whether it’s baseball, basketball, or football. We’ve got music celebrities in the world; we’ve got movie celebrities. So, Americans just want celebrities, celebrities, but that’s not what you see when you read 1 and 2 Corinthians.

    The people of our churches and our countries need the inexhaustible treasures of our all-sufficient Bible. Proclaimed by preachers called by Christ in the churches. Applied to every aspect of their lives.

    Notice what I said. We need the inexhaustible treasures of our all-sufficient Bible proclaimed. You will never, I will never, exhaust the treasures of your Bible! I’m not saying you shouldn’t read good theology books, but you need to proclaim the gospel. You need to proclaim the whole counsel of God, the Bible, and you’ll never do that in your entire lifetime! So, you don’t need to go to some novelty. You don’t need something new. You need the Bible; you need the gospel; you need confidence in the sufficiency of the Word of God.

    2. We must be men of biblical conviction regarding the primacy of preaching the Word of God.

    Secondly, another conviction which I believe we must recover, we must have, is this: we must be men of biblical conviction regarding the primacy of preaching the Word of God in the churches, on the Lord’s Day.

    Turn in your Bibles to 1 Corinthians chapter 1, and I would like you to follow along as I read verses 17 through 24. 1 Corinthians 1:17-24. The Apostle Paul, of course, is writing these words:

    “For Christ did not send me to baptize, but to preach the gospel; not in wisdom of words, lest the cross of Christ should be made void. For the word of the cross is to them that perish foolishness; but unto us who are saved it is the power of God. For it is written, ‘I will destroy the wisdom of the wise, and the discernment of the discerning I will bring to nothing.’ Where is the wise? Where is the scribe? Where is the disputer of this world? Has not God made foolish the wisdom of the world? For seeing that in the wisdom of God the world through its wisdom did not know God, it was God’s good pleasure through the foolishness of the preaching to save them that believe. Seeing that Jews asked for signs, and Greeks seek after wisdom: But we preach Christ crucified, unto Jews a stumbling block, and unto Gentiles foolishness; But unto them that are called, both Jews and Greeks, Christ the power of God, and the wisdom of God.”

    There we end our reading.

    Notice in verse 17 Paul tells us what his commission was from Jesus Christ. The risen Lord Jesus Christ commissioned Paul to preach the gospel, to evangelize, to announce good news from the Living God. Paul was not, he says, sent to baptize people. Paul was not opposed to baptizing people. He states in this very letter that he actually did baptize some individuals, but he’s saying his commission, his primary task was not to baptize, but it was rather to proclaim the gospel, to preach the gospel. Indeed, there are many other things that we could add to that list, not sent to baptize, things that were not to be Paul’s primary work as an apostle. Paul was not sent by Christ to establish schools; he was not sent by Christ to establish hospitals or orphanages. Even though those works may be very noble in themselves as organizations for Christians to undertake.

    Paul was sent by Christ to proclaim the good news: that God sent His Son to live a perfect life for sinners, to die on the cross under God’s wrath as a sacrifice for sin, to be raised from the dead, and to bring a multitude which no man can number to glory at last. Paul was sent to proclaim that message of salvation to men to make disciples, to gather them together into churches. That was his primary task and focus, and that is to be your primary task and focus as pastors of the Lord Jesus Christ.

    Notice also Paul’s message. I’ve already alluded to it. He states repeatedly things like this: he says he preached the cross of Christ, the word of the cross, Christ crucified. Of course, that doesn’t mean that Paul went around and just said, “Hear about the cross of Christ; hear about the cross of Christ.” No. Of course, he explained in detail the realities of God the Creator, Christ the Saviour, man the sinner and the creature, man accountable to God. He explained those realities in his message. He did not neglect the details of the Word of God, but you see, the Corinthians were beginning to question the message, they were beginning to question the messenger, and they were beginning to question the method, as well. Again, it’s not that they would come right out and say, “Well we don’t believe the gospel really is the power of God,” but you see, they did what many of our people do. They looked around and said:

    “We’re not a very impressive bunch of people here in Corinth. I mean, I like to think that I’m kind of impressive here in the church in Corinth. I’ve got a little bit of eloquence, but I look around and we’ve got former prostitutes, former homosexuals, former fornicators, former idolaters, former covetous people. The riff-raff of society make up our church. So, maybe something’s wrong with our message. Don’t we need the movers and the shakers of the Corinthian society in our congregation? How can we get them into our congregation? Well, maybe Paul’s message wasn’t really the right message, and he wasn’t very impressive himself anyways physically. The way he went about it—and really sometimes Paul, when he was here, he preached about judgement. People aren’t going to want to hear that! He preached about wrath. He preached about matters of sexual immorality. That was too much, too blunt. You know, the people don’t want to hear about repentance and faith. The method he used—wouldn’t it have been better if instead of preaching he was just more laid back, sat in a chair and just casually talked and shared with everybody? I mean, he was kind of confrontational at times, and really, this preaching was just a monologue. People don’t like that. They don’t like to be preached at, and young people in Corinth, they’re not interested in that!”

    That’s the Corinthians mindset. That is a very common mindset, at least in America today.

    By the way, preaching is not a monologue. I’m the only one speaking right now, but preaching is not a monologue. God the Holy Spirit is involved with preaching. A preacher’s involved with preaching, and you not only are listening to preaching, but you are supposed to be engaged in your hearts and minds. Though you’re not verbalizing anything, you’re communicating back to God, you should be. You should be saying, “Lord, I have slipped in this area. I see my sin. Forgive me.” That’s what you should be doing, even as you sit there. You should not be sitting just passively doing nothing. True preaching is not really a monologue in that sense, but a lot of people think that. They think, “Well, modern Americans, they don’t want that.”

    I bless God that when I come to Trinity Baptist Church we are a multi-cultural, multi-ethnic congregation. We’ve got converted Jews in our congregation. We’ve got a lot of converted pagans. We’ve got a lot of converted Roman Catholics. We’ve got people who’ve come from—as they say in black America “the hood,” they came from “the slums” of center city Philadelphia. Black men, African Americans who don’t even know who their father is. We’ve got Chinese people in our congregation. We’ve got Korean people in our congregation. We’ve got people who grew up in Christian homes; people who never grew up in Christian homes. We’ve got that diversity. Why? It is because of the proclamation of the gospel of Jesus Christ in all of its simplicity and profundity from the Bible. It is because God the Spirit has blessed that preaching, and that is what your culture, your country needs. We do not impact the people of our cultures by mimicking our cultures. We do not impact our world by being like the world. We do not impact our country and our people and our countries by caving in to their carnal, worldly, unbiblical pressures, ways, views, thoughts.

    We need to be men of biblical conviction regarding the primacy of preaching. As Pastor Piñero said in the previous message—there is something wrong if you go into a church, like I have mentioned earlier, a one-hour service and over 40 minutes is nothing but one little ditty song after another—and I’m not exaggerating, it was grievous! The message was maybe 12, 13 minutes, and it wasn’t much of a gospel message. We need a recovery of the preaching of the gospel, like Paul did in Corinth. America is a modern Corinth. We need to be men of conviction who preach the gospel, like Paul did in Corinth.

    Again, as Pastor Piñero said, we leave the consequences to God. Do we want to see multitudes saved? We should! We should pray to that end, preach to that end. We’re not interested in just having empty pews and a few people. We shouldn’t be, but we don’t compromise God’s Word and God’s gospel. That’s the point, and that’s not popular in America.

    Thirdly, the last conviction, again, there are other convictions we should have, but I’m just highlighting three. I firmly believe we have to be men of biblical conviction regarding the exercise of Christian love in our churches and in the world. So, I firmly believe we need to be men of biblical conviction concerning the authority and sufficiency of Holy Scripture. I thoroughly believe we should be men of biblical conviction regarding the recovery of the primacy of preaching the Word of God in our churches in the world. Thirdly, we must be men of biblical conviction regarding the exercise of Christian love in this world.

    3. We must be men of biblical conviction regarding the exercise of Christian love in this world.

    John Calvin said this: “Whatever is devoid of love is of no account in the sight of God.” Think about that. “Whatever is devoid of love is of no account in the sight of God.

    Listen to Charles Spurgeon: “Fidelity [or faithfulness] to God does not require any to act uncharitably to God’s servants. We need to treat God’s servants, God’s people, with love. Love, of course, will mean at times being faithful and wounding people, in love, with the Word of God. Sometimes Christians need correction and rebuke and reproof in love, but Spurgeon’s saying we shouldn’t have bitterness, hatred, ill-will, harshness in our hearts towards God’s servants or towards God’s people.

    Listen to B.B. Warfield: “He who is not filled with love is necessarily small, withered, shriveled in his outlook on life and things.” Small, withered, shriveled if you don’t have love, Warfield said.

    Matthew Henry said: “Love is the very essence and life of the Christian religion.”

    Augustine said: “One loving heart sets another heart on fire.”

    “A man may be a good doctor without loving his patients; a good lawyer without loving his clients; a good geologist without loving science; but he cannot be a good Christian without love.”

    Turn in your Bibles to John 13, please. I’ll begin reading at verse 34.

    John 13:34, “A new commandment I give unto you, that you love one another; even as I have loved you, that you also love one another. By this shall all men know that you are my disciples, if you have love one to another.”

    Well, let us ask some questions, briefly, of this passage, these two verses.

    Why does Jesus call this a new commandment? The Old Testament required us to love our neighbors as ourselves, but you see, notice what Jesus says here. He is now commanding His disciples that they are to love their brothers and sisters even as He has loved them. That’s the high standard now. We are to love the brethren in our church even as Christ has loved us.

    To whom was Jesus speaking? He was speaking to His disciples, genuine believers born again by the Spirit of God. Judas had already departed.

    What was the essence of the new commandment here? Well, we’re commanded to love, as I said, even as Christ has loved us, and this love for your Christian brothers and sisters in the local church is to be what others see when they come into your church.

    How does Jesus Christ love you? He loves you faithfully; He loves you sacrificially; He loves you selflessly. He loves you not seeking His own, and that is how we, as pastors, are to love the people of God in our churches.

    You know, it’s easy for me when I come here to North Bergen, and I’ve had the privilege of doing this a lot over the past, I don’t know, six months, eight months. I have thoroughly enjoyed every time I come here. Trinity’s about 25 miles away West, I think, Trinity Baptist Church; but Pastor Piñero, Pastor Martinez, they have me come down here. So, I’ve gotten to know people in the church here, and by the grace of God, they are wonderful people. I’m not flattering. They’re just wonderful brothers and sisters. I love coming here. But you know what? I am commanded by Christ to love the people of Trinity Baptist Church where I am a pastor, and I think if I really knew all of the sheep here in this church the way Pastor Piñero and Pastor Martinez do I would find out there are some that are difficult, some difficult sheep who are not as lovable as I first thought. Now, am I right, Pastor Piñero? *laughs* I think if Pastor Piñero or Pastor Martinez came to Trinity—they do—and they interacted with our people, they don’t know their problems, they don’t know their struggles, that don’t know their sins, by God’s grace I think they’d find them very lovable also, but if they lived with them they’d find out what I know: some of them are very difficult.

    You are commanded by Christ to love the sheep under your care given to you by Jesus Christ. It’s not easy, but when you think about how Christ loves you—. I say to my wife—she says I say this too frequently—it’s probably once a month that I say to her, “Julie, I don’t know why you married me. I think sometimes I am such a difficult man. Why did you marry me?” And she smiles and says, “I married you because I loved you, and I still love you. I adore you,” she says. Now, she adores God first, but I mean she says, “I adore you.” I say, “But I’m a very difficult man!” She then says, “Well, yes, you are difficult at times. You’re high maintenance.”

    Well, when I remember how Jesus Christ loves me and I think of how much Jesus Christ—far more than my wife, my wife puts up with a lot, but then I think of what Jesus Christ puts up with me. Then it’s not so hard to love that difficult sheep. When I think about what Christ has done for me, what Christ is doing for me, how much Christ has to put up with me, His patience with me. How many times have I gone back to Jesus Christ and confessed the same sin again and again and again? Can I not be forbearing and longsuffering and patient with sheep that sin again and again and again in the same way? You see, that’s the essence. You are to love the sheep as Christ loves you.

    What is the consequence Jesus says? The world. We want to win the world? We don’t win the world by being like the world. We win the world by the people of God in the congregations, under the preaching of the gospel and the Word of God, with confidence in the Word of God, where the disciples are loving one another even as Christ has loved them. The world looking on then does see something very different! That’s the way we evangelize the world! Yeah, we evangelize the world by preaching to them, teaching them, sharing the gospel whenever we can do that, either on the Lord’s Day and some other setting. Yes, we do that. I’m not saying we don’t evangelize in other context, but when people come into the church they still might not like to come back because they’ve heard the Word of God proclaimed faithfully, but God can still use that, because that is seed planted in their hearts, even when they walk out the door. But when they see the reality of real, vital, biblical, Christian love one for another—I mean, I’ve had visitors, I’ve had unconverted people say that, I bless God, about the people of Trinity. They see this six foot five black guy, I mean, I’m not putting down black color, okay? Don’t misunderstand me here. His name is Nate. He’s six foot five. He’s a dark African American. When they see him leaning over and hugging a short, white guy, what do they see? When they look they see these two guys really love each other. Michael Falciola, he’s a short white guy, and Nate and him are very good friends. That’s what you see happening. Well, what do people think when they see that? They don’t see that out in the world. They don’t even see that in their family relationships! They see squabbling and fighting!

    What I’m saying is: brethren, we need to teach the people of God. We need to encourage the people of God. We need to show them, by our example, the reality of Christian love. You do that as you contemplate the love of God in Christ for yourself.

    As pastors, people need to know that you really do love them. There are differing personalities. One of my fellow elders, he will admit he’s more reserved. He will admit he’d be content to be in his study 24/7. Now, he is a people person, but he will tell you he wasn’t always a people person. He will tell you, “If I could, I’d be happy to be in my study 24/7, not have any phone calls, not have any emails, not have any contact.” He has to work at that. So, you might need to work at it. You should ask Christ to change you and make you like Jesus Christ. The common people heard Him gladly.

    When Lazarus was dead in the tomb, Martha came and got Jesus, and Jesus wept. I think He wept for Lazarus first; He wept because of the reality of what sin has brought into the world; He wept because of the way the Jews were speaking; but I think primarily for Lazarus in his death, and His love for Lazarus and for Martha and Mary. What did the Jews say? “Behold how he loved him.” They could see that Jesus, in His weeping, loved Lazarus. It says in the text He loved Martha and Mary, as well.

    People respond to sincere, Christian love. When you develop that kind of relationship with the sheep, when the time comes and you have to sit down with a brother or a sister or a couple and correct them on something, they know that you have a heart of goodwill and love for them, and they know that even though they’re hearing something that is tough, because of problems or sin, they usually will not deny that you still love them. That is how you shepherd the people of God.

    We need to be men who love Christ; men who love the people of God in our congregations; men who love sinners. Do you love sinners?

    Every once in awhile somebody will say something to me like, “Well, you know, but if you just took off that tie—it puts people off.” I say, “That’s absolute nonsense.” What people don’t know is that I was not raised in a Christian home. I was a total pagan, growing up. I was converted two months before I graduated from university. I was brought by a friend into a Reformed Baptist Church. People were wearing ties; I was basically a quasi-sort-of hippy-sort-of-person, and a pagan for sure. I wasn’t turned off by the fact that people were wearing ties! It’s nonsense. What really drew me in at that church service was the fact that I heard the preaching of the Word of God, because God used that preaching to bring me and draw me to Jesus Christ.

    We should not lose confidence in the preaching of the Word of God, in the Word of God, or in loving sinners.

    Well, let’s close in prayer.

    Lord, we do pray that You would make these convictions which are rooted in Scripture to be our convictions individually and corporately. We pray that You would so work in our individual lives that we would, by Your grace and power and the work of Your Spirit, have an influence for good upon our congregations, as well as upon the world about us. We ask that You would do this for the glory of Christ, for the good of the churches, for the good of sinners, needy sinners all about us. Help us, we pray, for we are needy men, we are needy congregations. In Jesus Christ’s worthy name we pray. Amen.

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  • 2016 Pastors’ Conference | Men of Conviction I

    [two_third last=»yes» spacing=»yes» center_content=»no» hide_on_mobile=»no» background_color=»» background_image=»» background_repeat=»no-repeat» background_position=»left top» hover_type=»none» link=»» border_position=»all» border_size=»0px» border_color=»» border_style=»» padding=»» margin_top=»» margin_bottom=»» animation_type=»» animation_direction=»» animation_speed=»0.1″ animation_offset=»» class=»» id=»»][fusion_text]Men of Conviction I[/fusion_text][separator style_type=»none» top_margin=»» bottom_margin=»» sep_color=»» border_size=»» icon=»» icon_circle=»» icon_circle_color=»» width=»» alignment=»» class=»» id=»»][accordian divider_line=»» class=»» id=»»][toggle title=»Video» open=»no»][/toggle][toggle title=»Audio» open=»no»]

    [dlaudio link=»https://www.conferenciapastoral.org/wp-content/uploads/Sermones/2016-05-02-Men-of-Conviction-1-Jeff-Smith.mp3″]Download Audio[/dlaudio][/toggle][toggle title=»Text in English» open=»no»]Well, it is my privilege to be here with you, and as we seek God briefly in prayer, let’s ask for His blessing upon our time together. We certainly feel our need for the help of `God. So, let’s seek Him in prayer.

    Lord our God we do thank you for this gathering. We thank you that You have promised that even where two or three are gathered together in Your name there You will be in their midst. Thankfully, we are more than two or three. We are not a huge crowd, but we thank you, Lord, for these men that You’ve gathered here, and we pray that You would come by Your Holy Spirit throughout the entire conference and even in this hour. Use Your Word to feed these men. Use Your Word to strengthen them in their hearts. Use Your Word to encourage them to persevere in the work of the Christian ministry. Lord, we cry to You because we are weak; we are helpless; we need Your grace. So, we pray that You would give Your Holy Spirit to all of us in this very hour, and we ask for this mercy in Jesus’ name. Amen.

    The day was April 18th, 1521. Gathered in the large Imperial palace in the city of Worms, Germany were over 200 officials. This was well documented by witnesses at that occasion, so this is not just guesswork. There were over 200 officials, including the Holy Roman Emperor Charles Ⅴ, various dukes, princes, barons, ambassadors from other countries, archbishops, and representatives of the pope of Rome. Martin Luther, a preacher of the gospel, was summoned before this council in order to repudiate his biblical teachings and writings. Luther understood that he would be condemned as a heretic if he did not repudiate his teachings, and that he would probably be burned at the stake if he did not do so.

    Listen to Martin Luther’s clear words of conviction regarding his beliefs on that occasion. Here I quote Martin Luther:

    I cannot submit my faith either to the pope, or to councils, because it is clear as day that they have frequently erred and contradicted each other. Unless I am convinced by the testimony of the Scriptures or by clear reason, I am bound to the Scriptures I’ve quoted, and my conscience is captive to the Word of God. I cannot and I will not retract anything, since it is neither safe nor right to go against conscience. I cannot do otherwise. Here I stand. May God help me. Amen.

    Well, listen to these words of conviction from another Reformer. These are not famous words, but words of conviction from another Reformer.

    When we enter the pulpit it is not so that we may bring our own dreams and fancies with us. As soon as men depart, even in the smallest degree from God’s Word, they cannot preach anything but falsehoods, vanities, errors, deceits. We owe to Scripture the same reverence which we owe to God, because Scripture has preceded from God alone and has nothing of man mixed with it.

    Those words were the words of conviction regarding the Bible as the authoritative Word of the Living God, and they explain why John Calvin—who is the author of those words—it explains why he faithfully expounded in a sequential manner entire books of the Bible. He believed, without reservation, without apology, with conviction that the Bible is the infallible, inerrant, and all-sufficient Word of God. Therefore, John Calvin submitted his own brilliant mind—and he was brilliant—and his heart and his life to God’s Word, and he proclaimed it, being fully persuaded, not half-heartedly persuaded, but fully persuaded that that was exactly what all of the people in his hearing needed.

    My messages today are about the desperate need for men of biblical convictions.

    Now, following the pattern of my beloved mentor, Pastor Albert N. Martin, what do I mean by this phrase ‘biblical convictions’? Two simple words, but I’m going to briefly explain them anyways.

    A conviction is a firmly held belief. It is the quality of showing that one is firmly convinced of what one believes. That’s a conviction.

    What is a biblical conviction? Well, biblical truths which one firmly believes and loves—you don’t just believe it, you love it—truths which one is willing to speak of, defend when necessary, promote in a godly way, truths which one is willing to live by and die by.

    Martin Luther and John Calvin were men of biblical convictions, and though it may be true that none of us in this room will ever be of the same stature of Martin Luther of John Calvin, we can imitate them as they imitated Jesus Christ, and be like them and be like Christ; be men of biblical convictions.

    Grievously, we live in a day and a culture—and I think your Hispanic culture is probably the same as American culture—we live in a day and culture which is aggressively promoting so-called ‘toleration.’ When you examine that ‘toleration,’ of course, it is actually very intolerant. It is especially intolerant of anyone who proclaims biblical convictions regarding right and wrong, regarding truth and error, regarding godliness and ungodliness, righteousness and sin. Political leaders, news media, so-called ‘experts’, psychologists, teachers, even sadly, religious leaders, and a host of other non Christians—they are urging us as Christian men, as pastors, they are pressuring us, they are even harassing us that we should not be intolerant; we should not be judgmental of others; we need to be inclusive.

    But we—whether we’re Americans or Colombians or Costa Ricans or Dominicans or citizens of any other country—we do not need men of unrighteous compromise, or wishy-washy opinions, of flexible views that change when our circumstances change, that change when the current popular opinion changes. Neither do we need Christians who are harsh. I am not saying, when I say we need men of biblical convictions, I am not saying that we now need to be harsh, we need to be unloving, we need to be sinfully judgmental of others, we need to be censorious. I’m not saying that! We need to be like Jesus Christ, who was a man of biblical convictions and a man who definitely was a man of love, who loved people.

    We need men who have been born again by the Spirit of God through faith in Jesus Christ and His gospel, and who have become men of clear, comprehensive, courageous, gracious, holy, biblical convictions.

    If that’s what we need the question should be—hopefully it’s come to your mind—“Well, how do we, how do I become such a man of biblical convictions?” What I’m going to present to you is certainly not exhaustive, but I hope this is helpful. How do we become men of biblical convictions?

    1) By being born again of the Spirit of God.

    First of all, by being born again of the Spirit of God. I’m going to have to have you turn to different passages in the Bible. Some of them will be very familiar to you. I still would like you to turn to them. So first of all, John chapter 3, verses 5 through 7. How do we become men of biblical convictions? First of all, by being born again by the Spirit of God.

    In John 3:5 Jesus answered Nicodemus, “Truly, truly, I say unto you, except one be born of water and the Spirit he cannot enter into the Kingdom of God. That which is born of the flesh is flesh, and that which is born of the Spirit is spirit. Marvel not that I said unto you, ‘You must be born again.’”

    Merely being a religious leader in a church will not make you a man of biblical convictions. Nicodemus was a religious leader, and yet he was ignorant of basic spiritual realities. I could stand here and assume that every single one of you is born again, and I actually do believe that, but at the same time I’ve been a pastor long enough, sadly, to see men who were in the ministry depart from the ministry, depart from Jesus Christ. So, I start off with this foundational reality. You will never, I will never be a man of biblical convictions unless you are first of all truly born again by the Spirit of God.

    We’re at a Pastor’s Conference, and you could say, “Well, that’s so elementary. Why do I need to be told that?” You should not have that attitude towards this basic, foundational truth. You must be born again. Are you born again? Because there are men who also seek the office of a pastor for unsound, unbiblical reasons, for carnal reasons.

    That’s my first point here. I’m not going to spend more time on it. Are you born again? What do you think of Jesus Christ? What do you think of yourself? Do you view yourself as a servant of Jesus Christ, born again by the Spirit of God? That is foundational.

    2) By an experiential love of the Lord Jesus Christ.

    Secondly, how do we become such men of biblical convictions? By an experiential love of the Lord Jesus Christ. I mean, you need to daily, as best as the Spirit of God can help you, you need to daily experience the reality of the love of Jesus Christ for your soul and you need to love Him in response.

    Remember Paul’s words to the Philippians?

    “For me to live is Christ, and to die is gain.”

    When Paul wrote this letter to the church in Philippi, he had been arrested, he had been placed on trial for rebellion. He had appealed to Caesar; he was eventually sent to Rome, awaiting his final verdict. Paul faced the possibility of execution. He experienced the anxieties that attend the prospect of dying. Dying is an enemy! No Christian should be saying, “Well, I’m not afraid of death.” I mean, in one way Christians should be able to say, “I do not fear death. I am in Christ,” but death is an enemy, according to the Bible! And it would be unnatural to not have some fear of that.

    Even Jesus, in the garden of Gethsemane, the thought of not only the wrath of God but I think the experience of death overwhelmed His soul. Well, Paul was a normal human being, a normal man. He experienced normal human emotions. He did not relish the thought of being isolated and all alone. He clearly had fears. He speaks about them in his letters. He needed courage. He was not a rock of granite that had no feelings whatsoever.

    The reality of living supremely for his Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ—that however was what gave him the grace to face the reality of death. Death, he understood, would usher him into the presence of his Saviour who loved him and gave Himself for him.

    This is why he could write, “For me to live is Christ, but to die is gain.” Think of other words of Paul that he pinned on other occasions. He said, “Faithful is the saying worthy of all acceptance, that Jesus Christ came into the world to save sinners; of whom I am chief.”

    He also wrote, “I know Him whom I have believed, and I am persuaded..” See the conviction? “I am persuaded that He is able to guard that which I have committed unto Him against that day.”

    On another occasion he said, “The love of Christ constrains us, we judge that one died for all, therefore all died; and He died for all that they that live should no longer live for themselves, but unto Him who for their sakes died and rose again.” (2 Corinthians 5:14.)

    In Philippians again Paul said, “All of the things that I could’ve said were gained to me I now look at them and regard them as rubbish, garbage, because what I want supremely is Jesus Christ.”

    You see, he knew that Christ loved him, and he loved Christ in response, but if you are like me—thankfully you’re really not a lot like me in some respects, you would not want to be like me I’m sure—but if you’re a normal man, a normal Christian man like me, I at times struggle with knowing experientially that Jesus Christ loves me. You have to know that not just up here, but experientially, if you are going to be a man of biblical convictions in this world.

    How do you take what is I think sometimes elusive? It’s hard to grasp. The Bible’s plain; the Bible’s clear. The problem’s not the Bible. The problem is not Christ; the problem is not the Holy Spirit. The problem is remaining sin; the problem is our weakness in humanity. How do I grasp that Jesus Christ loves me? How do you do that? I’ll tell you how I do it.

    I take time and I think about biblical truth, and apply it to my heart and life. I think about the cross of Christ. I don’t think about an image of a cross. I certainly don’t think about a crucifix like is in Roman Catholic churches.

    But I think about the historical reality that there was a time, a day when the Son of God hung on a wooden cross outside of Jerusalem. When He did all of Jeff Smith’s sins, all of my sins were put to His account, were laid on Him; my sin in union with Adam, my first father, my sins since I came forth from the womb of my mother speaking lies. I have lied even as a Christian, sadly, and have had to confess my sin of lying to God and sometimes to other people. By God’s grace I am not a liar, but I have sinned by lying. On the cross of Christ all of my lies were put upon Him.

    The sin of pride. Again, by God’s grace I think I am a man who has humility, by God’s grace alone. But even yesterday my wife said to me, “Jeff, you are defensive. Why are you so defensive about that?” Something stupid, something ridiculous. So, I confessed my sin to her. I said, “Julie, please forgive me for speaking in a defensive, prideful, sinful way,” and I confessed it to God.

    Well, that’s sin of pride. Call it what it is. It is ugly, stinking pride. It is sinful. It is wicked. It was laid on Jesus Christ, and God poured out His righteous fury, His righteous anger, His righteous wrath upon His own beloved Son. He punished in His Son all of my sins, all of my iniquities, all of my transgressions, all of my failures to do what God commands me to do.

    Why? Why? Why did God do that? I deserve to be in Hell. I don’t deserve mercy. I should have been left by God on that broad road that leads to eternal destruction, but God, in sovereign grace, in sovereign mercy reached down in time, brought the gospel truth to my mind and heart from another Christian, and rescued me out of that broad road that leads to eternal destruction.

    Not only that, now I am not guilty before God, because of Christ’s work on the cross.

    “Now there is no condemnation to those who are in Christ Jesus.”

    There is no condemnation to me, and if God declares me innocent, God says there’s no guilt, God says there’s no condemnation, what man will condemn me? No man.

    That’s not all that God in Christ has done for me or for you, as a believer.

    God also gives to me the perfect righteousness of Jesus Christ. I have no righteousness in myself, but God also gives to me the perfect righteousness of Jesus Christ. So that when God looks upon Jeff Smith He doesn’t see Jeff Smith in one sense, He sees the righteousness of Christ, the righteousness of God!

    Not only that, in the death of Christ on the cross God has adopted me as His Son. He has given me His Spirit, given me spiritual life, regenerated me, and He has adopted me as His son. He is still my God and Creator, that is true and will always be true, but He is now my God and heavenly Father.

    If your were here last night you would have heard my illustration about the fact that I have a son who is adopted. I have three children who are adopted. They were all adopted when they were three or four days old. They know they’re adopted. My eldest son, about five years ago, said, “Dad, I hope you’re not upset with me, but I decided to find out who my biological father is.” You understand me? He’s adopted, but obviously he had a biological father and mother. So, he said, “I decided to find out who he is.”

    I said, “Josh, I’m not upset with you at all. That’s fine. What did you learn?”

    Now, Joshua is a born again Christian. He said, “Dad, he’s not my father. You are my father.” That is the way it is with us, as Christians. Satan is not your father, and of course no one else is ruling you, but God is your heavenly Father, if you’re a Christian.

    So you see for the Apostle Paul it was his knowledge of the love of Jesus Christ for his soul, and it was his responsive love back to Jesus Christ, thinking about all that Christ had accomplished for him, all that Christ was presently doing for him, all that Christ would yet do for him in the future, that made him the man of biblical convictions that he was.

    You can face many things and many trials and difficulties in life without emotions, not like a granite rock, but you can face many things in life when you know, “I am the purchased property of God in Jesus Christ. He is my Lord and Saviour. He loves me. He will always love me. He’s a faithful, loving Saviour.” I can therefore stand in the face of trial and difficulty as a pastor in the Church. Do you believe that? Do you know that? Do you know what I’m talking about? You should.

    Let’s move on. How do we become men of biblical convictions?

    First of all, by being born again of the Spirit of God; secondly, by an experiential love for Jesus Christ the Lord; thirdly, by continuous communion with the Lord Jesus Christ.

    3) By continuous communion with the Lord Jesus Christ.

    Turn to John 15, and verse 4 please.

    “Abide in Me, and I in you. As the branch cannot bear fruit of itself except it abides in the vine, so neither can you except you abide in Me. I am the vine, you are the branches; he that abides in Me and I in him, the same bears much fruit, for apart from Me you can do nothing.”

    If you would be and continue to be a man of biblical convictions, you must also continue in union and communion with the Lord Jesus Christ. You must abide in Him! Separated from Jesus Christ and His Word you will never be a fruitful Christian, you will never be a man of biblical convictions, because that is, I believe, part of the fruit of being united to Jesus Christ. It is only through daily feeding upon Christ and His Word, daily communing with Christ in prayer that genuine, spiritual fruit will be produced in your life, including being a man of biblical convictions.

    We read of the Lord Jesus Christ, that it came to pass when the days were well-nigh come that He should be received up, that He steadfastly set His face to go to Jerusalem. He was facing death, even as Paul later on did, but He was facing crucifixion; He was facing humiliation; He was facing humiliation not just before those people in Jerusalem who could see Him hanging on the cross, but He was going to face humiliation before all of the spiritual world as well. He knew that! He knew He was going to be a sin offering to God, and that prospect did not make Jesus jump for joy. He knew that He was facing the prospect of the wrath of His Father in Heaven, but we’re told there in Luke 9, “Jesus steadfastly set His face to go to Jerusalem.”

    Why? Well, for the joy that was set before Him He did that, thinking of all of the unnumbered hosts that He would redeem. Yes, that is true, but still there is more. He did this because He knew this was the right way to go. He had no other choice to accomplish His mission. He was a man of biblical convictions which were nurtured and strengthened by His daily communion with His God and Father.

    Have you ever asked yourself when you read the New Testament, the gospels, have you ever asked yourself: how did Jesus know so many Scriptures? Maybe you wrongly think, “Well, He was God.” I don’t think that’s true. He is God, that’s true. He is God, but He is totally man, as though He were not God, totally God, as though He were not man. How did He know so many Scriptures? He was taught them by His parents. He heard them in the synagogues. He read them when He had the opportunity to read the scrolls. He memorized Scripture.

    You see, He didn’t sit back and say, “I have nothing to do.” He took the Word of God into His own heart. He communed with God with the Word of God, and that’s how He became a man of the Scriptures and thus a man of biblical convictions.

    How did He have the emotional strength He had? You could say: Well, He was God. Again, He was truly man! We see in the Scriptures that He truly had emotions, sinless emotions. How did He fight against those fears that He had? Not sinful fears, sinless fears. How did He deal with that sense of loneliness? You see, He communed with His God in prayer. You see that even in the garden of Gethsemane.

    How did He persevere even through opposition? He persevered through opposition because He daily communed with His God and Father in the Word and prayer. If you are going to persevere through opposition which you will face in your church—if you’ve not faced it yet you surely will if you’re a pastor for more than a few years—you’re going to face some opposition from people! Sometimes, sadly, from genuine Christians.

    What will cause you, what will help you to persevere through them, to do what is right, to be a man of biblical principle? You have to persevere, and you will as you commune with God your Father as Jesus Christ did: in His Word and in prayer.

    Are you doing that now? You should be.

    4) By continual transformation of your mind.

    Fourthly, how do you become such a man of biblical convictions? By continual transformation of your mind.

    Turn to Romans chapter 12, verse 1 please. You need a continual transformation of your mind. In Romans 12:1 we read:

    “I beseech you, therefore, brethren, by the mercies of God, to present your bodies a living sacrifice, holy, acceptable to God, which is your spiritual service. And do not be fashioned according to this world, but be transformed by the renewing of your mind, that you may prove what is the good and acceptable and perfect will of God.”

    You see, negatively what does Paul say? He says, “Don’t permit the world around you in your country, in your culture, to squeeze you, to mold you, to shape you according to its teachings, its philosophies, its perspectives, its ways, its lifestyles. Don’t do that! Don’t let it happen! It will happen if you do not resist it!

    Positively Paul says, “Be transformed..” Be metamorphosed, as it were, from a caterpillar to a butterfly. “Be transformed by the renewing of your mind. You do that by knowing, he says, “The good and acceptable will of God.”

    Well, how do you know the good and the perfect and acceptable will of God? By studying the Bible! You know, this is not rocket science. I don’t know if you use that phrase in the Hispanic world. This is not rocket science in one sense, but it’s amazing to me how we, as pastors, how older saints sometimes just overlook the basics of the Christian life. Sometimes, wrongly, it’s like, “Oh well I’ve gone beyond that.” Really? Really? You’re so mature as a Christian you don’t need to read your Bible anymore? I think that’s arrogance.

    So you study the Word of God in order to become transformed in your thinking, in order to resist the world’s pressures. Every teaching, every philosophy, every practice, every evangelical promotion, every evangelical article in the Internet on the websites and blogs, everything must be brought to the touchstone of Scripture, and your mind must be transformed so that your life is transformed.

    True Christianity is not just the mind, but true Christianity always involves the mind. It’s not to be bypassed.

    5) By implementation Christian military principles in your life.

    Fifthly, how do you become a man of biblical convictions? By implementation of what I’m calling ‘Christian military principles’ in your life.

    Turn to 1 Corinthians 16:13. “Be watchful, stand firm in the faith, act like men, be strong.”

    I think some here—Pastor Dunn, probably Pastor Piñero, maybe Pastor Vater—know that I was once in the United States army. I was an officer in the United States Army. So, when I read a verse like this I do think ‘military.’

    “Be watchful.” If you’re in war you have to be watchful.

    “Stand firm.” In this case for the Christian in the faith; for a military officer or a soldier you have to stand firm in your duty.

    “Act like men.” You don’t win a war by being a coward.

    “Be strong.” You don’t win a war by being weak and a wimp.

    That’s why I’m saying: how do become a man of biblical convictions? You have to implement in your life as a pastor, what I’m calling ‘military principles’ in your life.

    1 Corinthians 16:13. In this verse there are four commands which emphasize that you, as a man, as a Christian pastor, must be a Christian of unwavering principle, courage, and convictions.

    So, what is Paul saying here? He’s saying, “Don’t be oblivious to the temptations and dangers which surround you, your family, and the members of your church.” You need to be watchful. You need to be spiritually alert. You cannot be oblivious to what’s going on in the world about you, in your country. You cannot be oblivious to what’s going on in your church. You cannot have your head in the sand or your head so far up in the sky that you’re not aware what’s going on in your congregation.

    The command to be watchful reminds us that we are in a spiritual warfare. The Christian life is a warfare life. The temptations that assault you and your people enter in through the eyegate and the eargate via smartphones, via Internet, via TV, movies, music, teachers, work associates, neighbors, entertainment. You need to be not aware of the sin involved in these things, but you shouldn’t be ignorant of the fact that the single men or married men in your church can access pornography on their smartphones. If you think that never happens to any man in your church you are being oblivious.

    Real Christian men, I mean truly, born-again Christian men, can take a smartphone and fall into that sin of fornication, adultery by using a smartphone. Are you aware of that, or are you oblivious to it? All the same, you need to be a watchful pastor. You’re not to be oblivious to these realities. You shouldn’t take your smartphone and see if this can be done.

    I have Covenant Eyes, a software-filtering blocking on my smartphone and on my laptop and on my daughter’s laptop and on my wife’s laptop. I don’t know the codes to my daughter’s computer or my wife’s. Covenant Eyes sends an accountability report every week to my wife and to Pastor Shehzad Khan in my church. It shows them exactly what I do in my smartphone and my computer.

    I’m not saying you have to do that, but I say: don’t be oblivious. Be watchful over your own heart and soul. I can’t cope with that stuff. I cannot deal with it.

    That’s why I do this, but therefore I ask men in my church properly, privately, in a godly way, having a pastoral relationship with them, “Brother so-and-so, do you struggle with this?” It is more common than I could wish it was. I wish it was not. You know what? These Christian men are relieved that I, as a pastor, had the courage and the heart and the love to ask them that question, because they are ashamed, because they’re true Christians, they’re ashamed of what they have done. They’re afraid to speak to their wives. They shouldn’t be afraid, they’ve got good marriages, but there’s this fear aspect. There’s this sense of, “I can’t talk to anybody; I can’t say this. What will people think of me? What will my pastor think of me?” You have to be a man of biblical convictions. You have to be a faithful shepherd. You have to be watchful.

    Furthermore, Paul says here, “Don’t be fickle. Don’t be compromising. Stand firm in the faith.” “In the faith” meaning in the body of truth in your Bible. You should not be having doubts about the veracity of the Bible. If you do, you need to speak to somebody else—Pastor Piñero as an example—and say, “I’m struggling with this.” You need to have total confidence that all of the Bible—from Genesis 1:1 to the conclusion of Revelation—is truly the authoritative, infallible, inerrant Word of the Living God.

    No fickleness; no compromising; stand firm in the truth—including those things that today’s culture does not like. In America, you know, it’s almost to the place that you will be pilloried, you will be buffeted, you will be maligned if you dare to say, “I believe homosexuality is wrong, and I don’t call it ‘marriage,’ because it’s not marriage in God’s sight. Homosexuality is a perversion of God’s created order.” It is not gay; I don’t call it gay, because it’s not gay. I don’t even use their terms, but saying those kinds of things in this day and age, you know you can get yourself into a lot of hot water!

    I’m not saying you should go out and be stupid, as a pastor, and do something ridiculous to stupidly draw persecution to yourself, but when the time comes and you have to speak the truth in love boldly and courageously, you will stand firm in the truth.

    Don’t be moved or shaken from your biblical convictions by the latest evangelical trend. Just because it’s published in the evangelical magazines or blogs doesn’t mean it’s biblical and right. I’m not saying you should be cynical; I’m not saying you should be nasty, but you need to be discerning. You need to stand firm in the truth. You need to be like the Rock of Gibraltar. I hope you all know what that looks like. Those from the Canary Islands or Spain should certainly know. I hope you all know what the Rock of Gibraltar looks like. We need to be fixed, immovable in the truth of God’s Word.

    Paul goes on. He says, “Don’t be immature and childish. Don’t be petulant. Act like a man.” Remember Paul’s words earlier in 1 Corinthians? He said, “When I was a child I spoke as a child, I felt as a child, I thought as a child, but now that I am become a man, I put away childish things.”

    Remember Jesus’ words on one occasion in Luke 7? He said, “How should I describe this generation? They’re like children in the marketplaces who say to one another, ‘We piped to you, but you didn’t dance and sing.’” “You didn’t do this with us either. I’m going to go home.”

    We, as pastors, should not be like children in the marketplace. You should not be children in your heart, in your thinking, in your relationship to your family, in your relationship to the people of God. Your country does not need children in the bodies of men. Your country does not need pastors who have the bodies of men, but they’re children inside. We need men, by the grace of God, who are biblically mature and stable, consistent in their lives of godliness, who are predictable in the way they think and act, who are faithful, because they are men of biblical convictions.

    Furthermore, Paul says here, “Don’t be weak and faint; be strong, Christian men spiritually and practically.” Biblical truths which are embraced and loved and implemented in your life, in your marriage, in your family, in your ministry, will enable you to be strong even in the face of persecution and death. So, be men of strength, with unwavering biblical convictions.

    I would like to briefly give you now, after giving you those principles to become a man of biblical conviction, I would like to give you briefly some compelling examples of men of biblical convictions from the Bible.

    1. Joseph.

    First of all, Joseph. I give you these examples, because we often say in English, “A picture is worth a thousand words,” and we do learn a lot from observing others in the Bible and in Church history and in our present lives.

    Remember Joseph in Egypt? Potiphar’s wife is daily tempting him to commit adultery. What did Joseph do? What did Joseph say? Joseph said to Potiphar’s wife, “How then could I do this great wickedness and sin against God?”” You see, Joseph was a man of biblical convictions The Bible tells us he was a handsome man. He was clearly physically fit. He was a normal man, sexually, but being tempted by this woman, he had the convictions biblically, that that would be sin against his God. It would be great wickedness.

    The Law of God regulated Joseph’s thinking, his actions, his relationships to others. His love for his God and Saviour controlled his thinking and heart, and interestingly, if you’re think about it, it was not just his love for God. Joseph—by refusing Potiphar’s wife and her advances—Joseph was not only manifesting love for God his Saviour, but he was really showing love for his Egyptian master: Potiphar! That would have been extremely wicked and unloving for Joseph to engage with sexual affairs with his master’s wife. So, he was actually showing love not only to God, but to Potiphar!

    He was really actually also showing love to Potiphar’s wife. That would not have been love to do that with Potiphar’s wife! Egyptian culture, Egyptian social pressures, this woman did not squeeze Joseph into their mold. He was a man of unashamed, clear, biblical convictions.

    Sexual sins are the fall of many a pastor. I can think of at least two without any difficulty right now who are no longer in the Christian ministry because of adultery. Do not be deceived. “He who thinks he stands let him take heed, lest he fall.” Joseph is a vivid example.

    2. Daniel.

    Secondly, Daniel. We read in Daniel 6:

    “When Daniel knew that the writing was signed, he went into his house (now his windows were open in his chamber towards Jerusalem); and he kneeled upon his knees three times a day and prayed and gave thanks before his God, as was his custom.”

    No one was permitted to pray at that point in time to any god except to the king, but Daniel was a man whose biblical convictions shaped his thinking, his affections, his life, in every circumstance of life! What he ate and drank, his prayer life, when he prayed, to whom he prayed—that was all determined not by Babylonian culture about him, not by the pressures of society upon him, which were no doubt very real, not by the sinful commandments of men, but by the Word of God.

    3. Stephen.

    Thirdly, Stephen in the New Testament in Acts chapter 7.

    “Now when they heard these things [the Sanhedrin] they were cut to the heart, and they gnashed on Stephen with their teeth. But he [Stephen] being full of the Holy Spirit, looked up steadfastly into heaven and saw the glory of God, and Jesus standing on the right hand of God.”

    Steven proclaimed his biblical convictions to the Sanhedrin, and he lived by them. Because of that he was falsely accused. He was seized; he was arraigned on trial before the Sanhedrin, and what did Stephen do? Did he give up his convictions under the pressure of the Sanhedrin? Did he compromise his convictions to escape persecution? No. He stood firmly rooted in his biblical convictions. He feared God, not men. He loved God and he loved men, and he loved them so that he faithfully proclaimed God’s truth to them.

    That’s what you must do in your churches. That’s what I must do in my church. Now, I don’t want you to sit there and think, “Well, it sounds like Pastor Smith never has fear.” That is definitely not true! “Well, it sounds like Pastor Smith is always bold as a lion.” That is definitely not true!

    There have been many, many times over the twenty-two years or whatever that I’ve been a pastor at Trinity Baptist Church, the same church, where before I get into my car at night to go to a pastoral meeting I say to my wife, “Honey, please pray for me.” I tell her where I’m going. I don’t tell her the problems. I just say, “I’m going to meet with this couple. It’s not going to be easy. I would rather be shot in the head than go to this meeting.” Of course, I don’t really mean that, but it’s nevertheless expressed to my wife the truth, sadly, of my feelings.

    There are other times when I say to her, “Honey, I would like to get a job at Staples.” Do you know what Staples is here? You know, it’s this store that sells office supplies. I’d like to just be at the cash register. No problems, just do the work at the cash register. Do you know what my wife says to me? She says, “You would be so unhappy, and you would end up becoming manager. Then as manager you would have problems. Then what are you going to do? Leave Staples and find another job?”

    So I’m not giving you these examples as though somehow I have no struggles. I look at these examples when I have struggles.

    4. Jesus.

    The last example is the Lord Jesus Christ. He is the supreme example of what it means to be a man of biblical convictions.

    It is just remarkable. When you read your Bible, when you read the four gospels, you and I should frequently say, “Lord, make the gospel accounts fresh to my heart and soul.” We can become so familiar with the Bible and the gospels themselves, they’re even kind of predictable, because we’ve read the gospels so many times. You’re reading through Mark and you know what’s coming next. You even have a lot of it memorized. It can be predictable. It can be the same, and not fresh. That’s not good.

    You need to pray that it would not be that way, because you read the gospel accounts and you think about how Jesus was assaulted verbally by the enemies of Christ, the enemies of truth, on many occasions, and how He never, never sinned. He didn’t sin in His thoughts; He didn’t sin in His emotions; He didn’t sin in His attitude; He didn’t sin in His words; He didn’t sin in the tones of His words; He didn’t sin in His behavior. He never, never, never deviated from being a man of biblical convictions. He spoke the truth. He spoke the truth boldly; He spoke the truth lovingly.

    Consider Jesus in the Garden of Gethsemane. In Matthew 26, verse 39 we read,

    “And He [Jesus] went forward a little, and fell on His face, and prayed, saying, ‘My Father, if it be possible, let this cup pass away from me; nevertheless, not as I will, but as You will.’”

    Here you see the wonder of the glory of the God-man. He knew God as His Father perfectly. Here He is pouring out His heart to His Father in Heaven saying, “Let this cup..” He understood the reality of the wrath of God in a way that we do not, because He was truly God. He understood the heinousness, the awfulness of sin, our sin, in a way that we do not. So, He did want to recoil from that.

    “Let this cup pass away from me; nevertheless, not as I will, but as You will.’”

    There you have the supreme example of Jesus Christ, your Saviour, your Lord, being a man of unshakable, uncompromising, biblical convictions. If He was not, you and I would have no forgiveness. We would not be saved!

    Applications

    Let me conclude by giving a couple of practical, brief applications. As a pastor, you need to embrace the reality that you will experience trials. As a pastor you will suffer. You need to embrace that reality. You don’t need to go out looking for suffering. You don’t need to go looking for persecution, but you need to realize it will happen. It will happen not just once as you serve as a pastor. It especially will happen when you are a man of biblical convictions.

    Joseph had trials. Why was he in Egypt? Daniel had trials in Babylon for sure, didn’t he? Stephen faced persecution and death. The Lord Jesus Christ received much opposition. So did all of the prophets; so did all of the apostles; so do ordinary Christians; so will you. Do not live in a dream world thinking somehow, as a pastor, you will never have to face opposition, you will never suffer. You will, but it’s there that your convictions can shine forth to the glory of God.

    You will then say, “It is not in me. I am not a man of strength. I am a man of weakness, but it is the strength of Christ in me that you see.” Yes, I am a man of biblical convictions, and when I say “by the grace of God” I am not just saying that, dear brother, dear sister. I’m not just saying that to you men here, because that’s the nice thing to say, the correct thing to say, “Well, by the grace of God I am this.” That’s the truth. If you are a man of biblical convictions it will be because God, in His grace, has made you such.

    The application for you is that you need to embrace the reality that to be a pastor of biblical conviction requires hard work. It doesn’t just happen. Jesus said, “Truly, truly, I say unto you, a servant is not greater than his lord, neither one that is sent greater than he that sent him. If you know these things blessed are you if you do them.”

    It requires work! It is God who works in us, that’s totally true, but at the same time the Bible teaches we too are to work, not just work out our salvation, but we are to take biblical truth and apply it to our hearts and to the concrete situation of being a pastor everyday. Being a pastor is not glamorous; being a pastor is not sensational; being a pastor can often be very difficult and heartbreaking. Aside from one or two things in my personal life, as a Christian, most of my heartbreaks have been because I’m a pastor.

    But when you do the work of Jesus Christ, as a pastor, and serve Him from the heart in love to Him, love to the Church, love to the people of God, you will one day be rewarded by your Saviour, and you will hear His words with your own glorified ears, “Well done good and faithful servant. You have been faithful over a few things. I will set you over many. Enter into the joy of your Lord.” You need to remember those future words as you slug it out as a pastor and the difficulties that come.

    I would also say, because I don’t want to be imbalanced, there are many delights of being a pastor as well. I’m sure you know that. I’ve experienced it. There are joys as well. Be a biblical man of biblical convictions, and there’s joy as well.

    Let us close now in prayer.

    Lord our God, we plead with You that You would work in each one of our hearts and lives, that by Your grace and power, by the work of Your Holy Spirit in us, we would be men of biblical convictions. Help us, Lord, to be such when things are difficult, when there are trials, when there’s opposition. Lord, grant us grace to be such even in times of joy and prosperity. We pray that You would help us to follow in the footsteps of those who have gone before us, the prophets, the apostles, many other Christians, and especially our Lord Jesus Christ. Please answer these prayers that we bring to You now in His name. Amen.

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